˜yÐÄvlog

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loculus

[ lok-yuh-luhs ]

noun

plural loculi
  1. Biology. locule.
  2. Ecclesiastical. a compartment in an altar, in which relics are kept.
  3. a recess in an ancient catacomb or tomb, where a body or cinerary urn was placed.


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Other ˜yÐÄvlog Forms

  • ¾±²Ôt±ð°ù·±ô´Ç³¦î€ƒu·±ô³Ü²õ noun plural interloculi
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˜yÐÄvlog History and Origins

Origin of loculus1

1855–60; < New Latin, special use of Latin loculus, diminutive of locus place; locus, -ule
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Example Sentences

Examples have not been reviewed.

It boasted ornately carved on the lintels around the entrance, inside were niches to house the dead called "loculi", each sealed with a portrait of the deceased, carved in limestone.

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The passages are lined with the usual loculi for the dead, sometimes adapted for a single body, sometimes for two laid together.

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The seeds are immersed in pulp, and are attached irregularly to the wall, base and centre of the loculi.

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The picture we are about to examine is found over a loculus or grave in this cemetery of Priscilla.

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The original entrance to the cemetery leads directly into a spacious corridor with no loculi, but recesses for sarcophagi, and decorations of the classical style of the 2nd century.

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