the tomb

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English - Turkish

Definition of the tomb in English Turkish dictionary

tomb
{i} türbe
tomb
mezar

O mezarda kimin gömülü olduğunu merak ediyorum. - I wonder who's buried in that tomb.

Askerin mezarını işaretlemek için yalnızca basit bir beyaz haç vardı. - There was only a simple white cross to mark the soldier's tomb.

tomb
{i} kabir
tomb
türbe/kabir
tomb
{i} ölüm
tomb
karayer
tomb
gömüt
casket
{i} küçük kutu
casket
{i} mücevher kutusu
casket
{i} tabut
casket
tabut/mücevher kutu
casket
{f} kutuya koymak
tomb
{i} lahit
tomb
{i} mozole
tomb
metfen
English - English
casket
tomb
To bury
tomb
{n} a repository or monument for the dead
tomb
A small building (or "vault") for the remains of the dead, with walls, a roof, and (if it is to be used for more than one corpse) a door. It may be partly or wholly in the ground (except for its entrance) in a cemetery, or it may be inside a church proper or in its crypt. Single tombs may be permanently sealed; those for families (or other groups) have doors for access whenever needed
tomb
To place in a tomb; to bury; to inter; to entomb
tomb
A pit in which the dead body of a human being is deposited; a grave; a sepulcher
tomb
A tomb is a large grave that is above ground and that usually has a sculpture or other decoration on it. a stone structure above or below the ground where a dead person is buried (tumbe, from tumba , from tymbos). Home or house for the dead. The term is applied loosely to all kinds of graves, funerary monuments, and memorials. Prehistoric tomb burial mounds, or barrows (artificial hills of earth and stones piled over the remains), were usually built around a hut containing personal effects for use in the afterlife. Burial mounds were a prominent feature of the Tumulus period in Japan (3rd-6th century); these often spectacular monuments consisted of earthen keyhole-shaped mounds surrounded by moats. Burial mounds, sometimes shaped like animals, were characteristic also of Indian cultures of eastern central North America 1000 BC-AD 700. With more advanced technology, brick and stone tombs appeared, often of imposing size. In Egypt tombs assumed great importance, especially in the form of pyramids. In medieval Christian thought, the tomb became a symbol of a heavenly home; this concept appeared in the Roman catacombs, whose walls display scenes of paradise. Since the Renaissance, the idea of the tomb as a home has died out in the West, except as a faint reminiscence in the mausoleums or vaults of modern cemeteries. See also beehive tomb, cenotaph, mastaba, stele. beehive tomb Qin tomb Ch'in tomb
tomb
{i} vault, grave
tomb
A monument erected to inclose the body and preserve the name and memory of the dead
tomb
a place for the burial of a corpse (especially beneath the ground and marked by a tombstone); "he put flowers on his mother's grave"
tomb
A house or vault, formed wholly or partly in the earth, with walls and a roof, for the reception of the dead
the tomb

    Turkish pronunciation

    dhi tum

    Pronunciation

    /ᴛʜē ˈto͞om/ /ðiː ˈtuːm/

    Videos

    ... as for the tomb of the meters behind it snow its missiles were built in the ...
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