BURY vs ENTOMB: NOUN
- A manor house; a castle.
- Soft shale or clay; flucan.
- A delicate pear of several varieties.
- A castle, manor-house, or habitation; a borough.
- A borough; a manor
- A burrow.
- A camp or heap of turnips or the like, stored up.
- N/A
BURY vs ENTOMB: VERB
- Enclose or envelop completely, as if by swallowing
- Dismiss from the mind; stop remembering
- Embed deeply
- Place in the earth and cover with soil
- Cover from sight
- To ritualistically inter a corpse in a grave or tomb. (see burial)
- To place in the ground. "bury a bone"
- To hide or conceal as if by covering with earth - "she buried her face in the pillow", "buried the secret deep inside"
- To put an end to; to abandon. "They buried their argument and shook hands"
- To score a goal
- Place in a grave or tomb
- Place in a grave or tomb
- To deposit in a tomb
BURY vs ENTOMB: TRANSITIVE VERB
- To outdo or defeat by a large margin.
- To put an end to; abandon.
- To occupy (oneself) with deep concentration; absorb.
- To place so as to conceal; hide or obscure.
- To place in the ground; cover with earth.
- Specifically: To cover out of sight, as the body of a deceased person, in a grave, a tomb, or the ocean; to deposit (a corpse) in its resting place, with funeral ceremonies; to inter; to inhume.
- To hide in oblivion; to put away finally; to abandon.
- The general name of many species of beetles, of the tribe Necrophaga; the sexton beetle; -- so called from their habit of burying small dead animals by digging away the earth beneath them. The larvæ feed upon decaying flesh, and are useful scavengers.
- To lay aside the instruments of war, and make peace; -- a phrase used in allusion to the custom observed by the North American Indians, of burying a tomahawk when they conclude a peace.
- To dispose of (a corpse) ritualistically by means other than interment or cremation.
- To place (a corpse) in a grave, a tomb, or the sea; inter.
- To cover out of sight, either by heaping something over, or by placing within something, as earth, etc.; to conceal by covering; to hide.
- To place in or as if in a tomb or grave.
- To serve as a tomb for.
- To deposit in a tomb, as a dead body; to bury; to inter; to inhume.
BURY vs ENTOMB: OTHER WORD TYPES
- To hide in oblivion; put away finally from one's thoughts: as, to bury an injury.
- To withdraw or conceal in retirement: as, lo bury one's self in a monastery or in solitude.
- Hence To cover up; keep secret; hide; conceal.
- Stop remembering
- Dismiss from the mind
- To cover or conceal from sight; sink or lodge in or under anything: as, to bury treasures in the earth or under rubbish; he buried the dagger in his enemy's heart.
- To deposit and inclose in a grave or tomb, as a dead body; consign to any final resting-place after or as after death; entomb.
- (idiom) (bury the hatchet) To stop fighting; resolve a quarrel.
- To deposit in a tomb, as a dead body; bury; inter.
BURY vs ENTOMB: RELATED WORDS
- Suffocate, Hide, Smother, Kill, Burial, Lay to rest, Swallow up, Eat up, Inter, Engross, Immerse, Forget, Swallow, Sink, Entomb
- N/A
BURY vs ENTOMB: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Abandon, Discard, Funeral, Erase, Hide, Smother, Kill, Burial, Swallow up, Inter, Engross, Forget, Swallow, Sink, Entomb
- N/A
BURY vs ENTOMB: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- John Hore wished to bury his Anglican wife in the tomb, however the Roman Catholic priest refused to bury a protestant in consecrated ground.
- Got back in bury free court to get instance id token to try again later in bury st edmunds man remaining in.
- Traditional direct bury pedestals are awkward to transport and handle and can only be used in a direct bury application.
- Germany and Russia agreed to bury the hatchet; they agreed to bury it in Poland.
- Either Christian decided not to bury the time capsule at all or he meant to come back and bury it, but just never did.
- We bury a human body but we never bury love and the memories we seek to retain.
- Kittens separated from mom too early will never learn how to bury and some dominant cats feel no need to bury.
- Bury Pile: A stack underneath your character where you put cards when you bury them.
- You can bury it, just as you bury a person who has died.
- Oh, bury, bury love that all condemn, And let the whirlwind mourn its requiem!
- The graves here were dug in the rock and the same rock was used to entomb the sites with a stone plate.
- Hewitt's work takes the natural world and unearths it from the places in which we so keenly try to entomb it.
- Sam an urban legend about a serial murderer who used to live in the building and entomb his victims in the walls.
- The Army Corps of Engineers was going to entomb the contaminated sediments at the harbor's edge and build a park on top.
- It is not permitted to divide the remains or retain, inter or entomb them in more than one place.
- Space junk threatens to entomb Earth in an artificial bubble, but promising solutions for cleaning up our trash are on the horizon.
- The mausoleums in these graveyards, which can entomb entire families, sometimes have ornamental statues and ironworks.
- Enslave, entrust, enthrone, entomb, enshrine, encircle, enclose, entwine, encapsulate, entangle, enable, endear, encase, etc.
- SYN: Inter, inhume, conceal, repress, suppress, obliterate, cancel, entomb, compose, hush.
- Entomb allows for the classic Dark Ritual, Entomb, reanimation that the deck is known for.
BURY vs ENTOMB: QUESTIONS
- Will Bury Metrolink be connected to Oldham and Rochdale?
- Did pirate Stede Bonnet bury treasure in wantoot plantation?
- What did ancient Egyptian pharaohs Bury in their bodies?
- What is ageage doing to support the Bury community?
- Did Lauren Silverman and Simon Cowell bury the hatchet?
- Where did the ancient Egyptians bury their Pharaohs?
- Which Bury St Edmunds restaurant owner launched crumbs?
- What is the team Bury Community Safety Partnership?
- What happened to former Bury footballer Tom Redmond?
- Does Bury Grammar School have a safeguarding policy?
- N/A