释义 |
Definition of columbarium in English: columbariumnounPlural columbaria ˌkɒl(ə)mˈbɛːrɪəmˌkɑləmˈbɛriəm A room or building with niches for funeral urns to be stored. 骨灰瓮安置室(或所) Example sentencesExamples - We descended into the columbarium and squeezed in between the many many wide ladders that the temple had decided were suitable for the narrow alleyways between shelves piled with urns containing cremated remains.
- Resting place to 560,000 people, the eerily serene hills of Green-Wood are filled with detailed columbaria, self-referential statues, and ornate mausoleums.
- One option being considered is high-rise columbaria.
- On either side of the entrance to the Wargrave columbarium are carvings of peacocks of considerable finesse, in such low relief that they are almost invisible at times; to know the artist would be instructive.
- Fresh information on Sir Edwin Lutyens's first mausoleum, the Hannen columbarium at St Mary, Wargrave, Berkshire, is provided by correspondence published here for the first time by Oliver Bradbury.
OriginMid 18th century: from Latin, literally 'pigeon-house', from columba 'pigeon'. Rhymesaquarium, armamentarium, barium, caldarium, cinerarium, dolphinarium, frigidarium, herbarium, honorarium, planetarium, rosarium, sanitarium, solarium, sudarium, tepidarium, terrarium, vivarium Definition of columbarium in US English: columbariumnounˌkäləmˈberēəmˌkɑləmˈbɛriəm A room or building with niches for funeral urns to be stored. 骨灰瓮安置室(或所) Example sentencesExamples - Fresh information on Sir Edwin Lutyens's first mausoleum, the Hannen columbarium at St Mary, Wargrave, Berkshire, is provided by correspondence published here for the first time by Oliver Bradbury.
- One option being considered is high-rise columbaria.
- On either side of the entrance to the Wargrave columbarium are carvings of peacocks of considerable finesse, in such low relief that they are almost invisible at times; to know the artist would be instructive.
- We descended into the columbarium and squeezed in between the many many wide ladders that the temple had decided were suitable for the narrow alleyways between shelves piled with urns containing cremated remains.
- Resting place to 560,000 people, the eerily serene hills of Green-Wood are filled with detailed columbaria, self-referential statues, and ornate mausoleums.
OriginMid 18th century: from Latin, literally ‘pigeon-house’, from columba ‘pigeon’. |