burial garment
Học thuậtThân thiện
Definition
Noun: A piece of cloth or clothing specifically used to wrap or cover a corpse in preparation for its burial or interment.
Usage
A "burial garment" is a specific type of funerary textile. It is used in the context of death rituals and practices across various cultures to prepare a body for its final resting place. The term refers to the cloth itself, not the act of dressing the body.
Examples
- The ancient mummy was still wrapped in its original linen burial garment.
- According to tradition, a simple white shroud serves as the burial garment.
- Archaeologists carefully examined the intricate embroidery on the royal burial garment.
Advanced Usage
- The concept can extend to non-textile coverings in some archaeological or anthropological discussions, though "garment" primarily implies cloth.
- It is often used in historical, archaeological, and anthropological texts to describe finds in tombs or graves.
Variants and Related Words
- Shroud (n): A cloth or sheet in which a corpse is wrapped for burial; a very close synonym for "burial garment."
- Winding-sheet (n): An older term for a shroud or burial garment.
- Cerements (n): Waxed cloths used for wrapping a corpse; a more specific, often archaic term.
- Pall (n): A cloth, often rich, spread over a coffin, hearse, or tomb. This covers the coffin rather than the corpse directly.
Synonyms
- Shroud
- Winding-cloth
- Cerements (archaic/specific)
- Funeral pall (though this has a distinct usage)
Notes
"Burial garment" is a compound noun. Its meaning is specific and literal, referring to the physical object. It does not commonly form idioms or phrasal verbs.
Noun
- cloth used to cover a corpse in preparation for burial