单词 | grave |
释义 | grave1 noungrave2 adjectivegrave3 adjective gravegrave1 /ɡreɪv/ ●●○ noun [countable] Word OriginWORD ORIGINgrave1 ExamplesOrigin: Old English græfEXAMPLES FROM THE CORPUS word sets
WORD SETS► Death Collocationsasphyxia, nounautopsy, nounbarrow, nounbequeath, verbbereaved, adjectivebereavement, nounbier, nounbody bag, nounbody count, nounburial, nounbury, verbcasket, nouncatacomb, nouncatafalque, nouncemetery, nouncenotaph, nouncharnel house, nounchurchyard, nouncoffin, nouncommittal, nouncondolence, nouncoroner, nouncorpse, nouncortege, nouncot death, nouncremate, verbcrematorium, nouncrib death, nouncrucifixion, nouncrucify, verbcrypt, noundeath mask, noundemise, noundeparted, adjectiveD.O.A., adjectivedrown, verbembalm, verbend, nounepitaph, nouneulogy, nounexhume, verbexpire, verbfatality, nounfuneral, nounfunerary, adjectivefunereal, adjectivegrave, noungravedigger, noungravestone, noungraveyard, nounheadstone, nounhearse, nounhospice, nouninter, verbinterment, nounmausoleum, nounmorgue, nounmortality, nounmortician, nounmortuary, nounmortuary, adjectivemourner, nounmourning, nounmummify, verbmummy, nounnecrophilia, nounobsequies, nounpall, nounpallbearer, nounpassing, nounperish, verbplot, nounprobate, nounprobate, verbpyre, nounquietus, nounremains, nounrest, verbrigor mortis, nounRIP, rise, verbsarcophagus, nounsepulchre, nounshroud, nounthrenody, nountoll, nountomb, nountombstone, nountumulus, nounundertaker, nounundertaking, nounurn, nounvault, nounwake, nounwar memorial, nounwill, nounwinding sheet, nounwreath, noun COLLOCATIONS FROM THE ENTRYverbs► dig a grave Phrases· In the churchyard, a man was digging a grave. ► mark a grave· The stone marked the grave of their young daughter. ► bury somebody in a grave (=put someone in a grave)· She was buried in a grave next to her older sister. ADJECTIVES/NOUN + grave► a shallow grave (=a hole that is not very deep in the ground)· They found the woman’s remains in a shallow grave in the woods. ► a mass grave (=one that is filled with many people, especially people killed in a war or people who died of a disease at a similar time)· Plague victims were buried in a mass grave. ► an unmarked grave (=one that does not have anything to show where it is or who is in it)· Until 1855, poor people here were buried in unmarked graves. ► a family grave (=one where members of a family are buried together)· Walter died in 1922 and was buried in the family grave in Finchley cemetery. ► an open grave (=one that has not yet been covered in earth)· He wept by her open grave. grave + NOUN► a grave site (=the place where a grave is)· The president visited the grave sites of 12 youths killed in recent bombings. COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES► grave concern (=very great concern)· This disagreement was a matter of grave concern to the US. ► grave/serious danger (=very great)· You have put us all in grave danger. ► dig a hole/trench/grave etc They dig a small hole in the sand to bury their eggs. ► serious/grave doubts· They have some serious doubts as to his honesty. ► a grave error (=extremely serious, with serious results)· He has committed a grave error. ► grave/great/serious/severe misgivings (=serious and important worries)· Most of us have grave misgivings about the idea of human cloning. ► a serious/grave mistake· There was a serious mistake in the instructions. ► a serious/grave mistake· The decision to take the money was a serious mistake. ► great/grave/serious peril The economy is now in grave peril. ► serious/grave reservations· They had serious reservations about the plan. ► a serious/grave risk (=real and big)· The most serious risk of flooding this evening is on the River Wye. ► as silent as the grave (=completely silent in a mysterious or uncomfortable way) ► unmarked grave an unmarked grave ► a war grave· He had gone with a friend to visit the war graves in Flanders. COLLOCATIONS FROM THE CORPUSADJECTIVE► early· I reckon that hat's in for an early grave.· Because if the indestructible Earnhardt can be put into an early grave, they all can.· Yet bows and arrows are very rare in early Anglo-Saxon graves.· The only thing you get out of that is an early grave.· Widows are suing the companies for death benefits, demanding compensation for the loss of husbands worked into an early grave. ► mass· Most sombre of all is the tomb over the mass grave of the R-101 victims at Cardington, Bedfordshire.· In Los Mochis, meanwhile, bodies are being exhumed from the mass graves one by one as they are identified.· Village residents stated that at least 100 people had been murdered and buried in mass graves in the area.· But the tombs were empty; the bodies had been bulldozed into mass graves in the south, where they had fallen.· They don't even have basic maps. Mass graves are already being dug.· Arms and legs, some of which still moved, were sticking out of the mass graves.· Discovery of Stalinist victims' graves During March a number of mass graves were found near former concentration camps or prisoner-of-war camps. ► open· You were looking into an open grave.· Something similar was happening now in that open grave in the snow.· Holman lay at the bottom of the open grave where he'd been roughly dumped.· Davey runs, but trips into an open grave. ► shallow· At first they saw only the little hand - the fist, decomposed but stretching out of the shallow grave.· Later, a badly decomposed body was found in a shallow grave five miles from the Lindbergh estate.· He died in May and the Seales buried him in a shallow grave in a park.· They looked like pets in a shallow grave.· Meg's coffin was lowered into a shallow grave packed in the dry, hard ground.· Her body was found buried in a shallow grave in a grove two days after she was last seen with Thompson.· Perhaps in a shallow grave of leaves and twigs.· Hours before the rebels arrived his body was hurriedly wrapped in a blanket and secreted in a shallow grave. ► silent· The huge room was as silent as the grave.· Stone House is the silent grave of an active industry that died at the turn of the present century. ► unmarked· The bodies that disappeared into unmarked graves?· His unmarked grave is just past mile 194.· Somewhere in unmarked graves, deep in earth, they are anonymous.· Another wasted corpse in yet another unmarked grave.· The beautiful, mountainous countryside is littered with the shallow, unmarked graves of the assassinated.· Mozart was buried in the customary way in an unmarked mass grave, and its exact location has never been discovered. ► watery· Moves are now being made to lift the aircraft from its watery grave and preserve it locally.· Steward needed three shots to escape his watery grave and had a drenched set of waterproofs to prove it.· Should any fellow be passing by, he must refuse their invitation or else they will dance him to a watery grave. NOUN► war· They are pressing their government to stop the diving and turn Truk into a war grave.· More than 800 men died and their bodies still lie in what has become Britain's most sacred maritime war grave.· They are reburied with full military honours in the region's Commonwealth war graves.· Several years before we saw her, she had gone with a friend to visit the war graves in Flanders.· After they have been examined, they will be buried with full military honours at one of the war graves. VERB► bury· Village residents stated that at least 100 people had been murdered and buried in mass graves in the area.· They then buried him in a grave that Phocas had prepared for himself during the night.· Those corpses, the ones he had buried in their makeshift grave under the old elm tree who were they?· Her body was found buried in a shallow grave in a grove two days after she was last seen with Thompson.· They were buried in mass graves, the corpses piled one on top of the other under a few inches of soil.· Hundreds of people were killed and buried in shallow graves beside the road.· But sadly, she may never be able to prove what killed the people buried in the mass graves. ► dig· If he went against this young man sitting opposite him, he would in effect dig his own grave.· Tom Kitain to its freshly dug grave by a grove of olive and cypress trees.· Richard Lombu, standing next to a freshly dug mass grave, also remembers the scene.· They dug up her grave when I started agitating in the Movement.· Another witness describes how he was captured by the rival faction and forced to dig graves to bury their dead.· I would dig the grave myself, six feet down into the dense clay soil.· They had already dug Graham Taylor's grave.· They dug graves for only one day before the Ecumenical Chaplaincy pulled Fritz Huls from his duties. ► digging· By failing to provide stories for a significant proportion of the population, are they not digging themselves a grave?· These guys were digging their own graves, and women all over the country were watching while they kept right on shoveling.· Then the burial party took a pace to the right and began digging the grave of another known soldier.· They were digging a mass grave. ► discover· I have already discovered where the graves lie. ► find· She went into the churchyard and found their parents' grave.· Later, a badly decomposed body was found in a shallow grave five miles from the Lindbergh estate.· They are most commonly found in women's graves of the sixth century accompanied by a relatively large quantity of grave-goods.· Later that day, we found more surface graves.· Then Schramm found the row of graves.· It is found predominately in female graves, either rough or faceted and polished, pierced and worn as beads. ► lie· So it might seem as if Snow could lie purring in his grave, and as if the two cultures were coming together.· Only Corrary was still subdued, remembering his brother lying in a makeshift grave far from his home Rorim. ► mark· They were the equivalent of tombstones on land: they marked the actual graves.· There were no walls, just rough stones the size of dinner-plates marking each grave.· The best-preserved was designated L.F.1, where a fence of planks marked a grave. ► rise· Broken columns, rising over the graves of those who had died prematurely, denoted truncated lives.· The walls are decorated with black wall hangings and tapestries depicting skeletal forms rising from crude graves. ► turn· Old time railwaymen would turn over in their graves!· He looked up at the portrait of the handsome, intense Willard, who was almost certainly turning over in his grave.· The possibility must have made Eleanor's ancestors turn in their graves.· Imagining his grandfather turning in his grave at the very thought, he paid £120 to repair the old one. ► visit· And the family regularly visit his grave.· We visit his grave every week and sometimes, Sophie will take something that she's made to put on it.· Now she's visiting the graves of her husband and 7 of their children.· Several years before we saw her, she had gone with a friend to visit the war graves in Flanders.· Louise wished to visit Dorothy's grave, where the memorial stone was now in place.· They had come to visit the graves of their own dead children.· I did not ask if they had visited Montaine's grave, or if others who had loved Montaine had joined them. PHRASES FROM THE ENTRY► the grave 1the place in the ground where a dead body is buried → tomb: At the head of the grave there was a small wooden cross.2the grave literary death: He took that secret to the grave.3somebody would turn in their grave used to say that someone who is dead would strongly disapprove of something happening now: The way Bill plays that piece would have Mozart turning in his grave. → dig your own grave at dig1(8), → from (the) cradle to (the) grave at cradle1(3), → have one foot in the grave at foot1(24), → silent as the grave at silent(3), → a watery grave at watery(4)COLLOCATIONSverbsdig a grave· In the churchyard, a man was digging a grave.mark a grave· The stone marked the grave of their young daughter.bury somebody in a grave (=put someone in a grave)· She was buried in a grave next to her older sister.ADJECTIVES/NOUN + gravea shallow grave (=a hole that is not very deep in the ground)· They found the woman’s remains in a shallow grave in the woods.a mass grave (=one that is filled with many people, especially people killed in a war or people who died of a disease at a similar time)· Plague victims were buried in a mass grave.an unmarked grave (=one that does not have anything to show where it is or who is in it)· Until 1855, poor people here were buried in unmarked graves.a family grave (=one where members of a family are buried together)· Walter died in 1922 and was buried in the family grave in Finchley cemetery.an open grave (=one that has not yet been covered in earth)· He wept by her open grave.grave + NOUNa grave site (=the place where a grave is)· The president visited the grave sites of 12 youths killed in recent bombings.
grave1 noungrave2 adjectivegrave3 adjective gravegrave2 ●●○ adjective ExamplesEXAMPLES FROM OTHER DICTIONARIES Thesaurus
THESAURUSvery bad► serious Collocations very bad – used about problems, accidents, illnesses, or crimes: · Violent crime is a serious problem in and around the capital.· The boy was taken to hospital with serious head injuries.· Fortunately, the damage to the car was not serious. ► severe very serious – used about problems, injuries, and illnesses: · He suffered severe injuries in a car crash.· The problem became so severe that they had to bring water in from other countries.· severe epilepsy ► grave used about a situation that is very serious and worrying, especially because it is dangerous or seems likely to get worse: · A thick fog descended and I knew that we were in grave danger.· The situation is grave – war now seems inevitable. ► acute used about an illness, problem, or situation that has become very serious or dangerous, and needs to be dealt with quickly: · She was taken to the hospital suffering from acute appendicitis.· In San Diego, the shortage of skilled workers is acute. ► desperate used about a situation or problem that is very serious or dangerous, especially because a lot of people need urgent help: · The situation is desperate – people here need aid before the harsh winter sets in.· The hospital is full of people in desperate need of medical attention. ► critical used about a situation that is very serious and dangerous and might get worse suddenly: · In 1991, the food supply situation became critical.· Eight people were killed and four are still in a critical condition. ► life-threatening used about a situation, illness, or condition in which someone could die: · Her child had a potentially life-threatening illness.· The situation was not life-threatening, but it was very worrying. ► be a matter of life and death spoken to be extremely serious – used when a situation is very urgent or important: · For people living with HIV, getting the right treatment is literally a matter of life and death. not joking► serious not joking or laughing, or not pretending: · His voice sounded serious.· They seem to be serious about their relationship. ► solemn very serious because of an important or sad occasion or ceremony: · My father looked solemn, the way grown-ups look at funerals.· The judge read the verdict in a solemn voice. ► grave written quiet and very serious – used especially about the way people look when something important or worrying happens: · She consulted Doctor Staples and returned looking grave.· He listened with a grave expression on his face. ► sombre British English (also somber American English) written sad, quiet, or serious because something unpleasant or worrying has happened or is going to happen: · They sat in sombre silence.· The meeting began in a sombre mood. ► earnest very serious and sincere – often used about someone who is young and not very experienced: · He was a rather earnest-looking young man.· ‘That’s wrong,’ she said, her voice sounding very earnest. COLLOCATIONS FROM THE ENTRY► grave danger Phrases Matthew’s life is in grave danger. ► grave concern The report expressed grave concern over the technicians’ lack of training. ► grave doubts I have grave doubts about his ability. COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES► grave concern (=very great concern)· This disagreement was a matter of grave concern to the US. ► grave/serious danger (=very great)· You have put us all in grave danger. ► dig a hole/trench/grave etc They dig a small hole in the sand to bury their eggs. ► serious/grave doubts· They have some serious doubts as to his honesty. ► a grave error (=extremely serious, with serious results)· He has committed a grave error. ► grave/great/serious/severe misgivings (=serious and important worries)· Most of us have grave misgivings about the idea of human cloning. ► a serious/grave mistake· There was a serious mistake in the instructions. ► a serious/grave mistake· The decision to take the money was a serious mistake. ► great/grave/serious peril The economy is now in grave peril. ► serious/grave reservations· They had serious reservations about the plan. ► a serious/grave risk (=real and big)· The most serious risk of flooding this evening is on the River Wye. ► as silent as the grave (=completely silent in a mysterious or uncomfortable way) ► unmarked grave an unmarked grave ► a war grave· He had gone with a friend to visit the war graves in Flanders. COLLOCATIONS FROM THE CORPUSADVERB► so· It was so grave, so mad.· If the matters concerned had not been so grave, it would have been equal to any comedy. ► very· Two of those wounded have very grave injuries.· The charges in this case are very grave, and they are entirely false.· He stopped dictating to take a phone call and I saw his face become shocked, then very grave.· It is on the contrary a very grave flaw, latent but pernicious in its effects. NOUN► concern· However, there was grave concern about the future of the avionic department there.· He told them he had received reports that had caused him grave concern.· As for Stewart, the family developed grave concerns about his health.· This matter is of the gravest concern to me, and to the good name of this unit.· The Parish Council have asked me to express their grave concern that such an incident could have occurred at all.· They watched with grave concern the formidable ascent of U2.· It is a matter of grave concern. ► consequence· This has grave consequences for Britain.· Even a tiny fling, even a protected one, can still have the gravest consequence.· The paradox is all the stranger because the power shortage has had predictably grave consequences for economic growth. ► danger· Mr. Flannery Is there not a grave danger of the former Soviet Union lapsing into anarchy?· I put myself to sleep each night by imagining that I am in grave danger.· The building now stands in grave danger from the weather, derelict and in ruins.· Huamanga, which had rejected all political influence, had few partisans in Congress and thereby found itself in grave danger.· Lynda La Plante is in grave danger of burning herself out and it's no laughing matter.· There is also a grave danger that the essence of education will be forgotten.· I have placed you in the gravest danger.· The four said their actions were reasonable, given what they alleged were the potentially grave dangers to the environment. ► doubt· But there is grave doubt among environmentalists as to whether the Government will fulfil its promises according to schedule.· I had grave doubts about where he might take it.· In my talk with Alec he himself expressed grave doubts whether he wished to take it on.· There must, too, be the gravest doubts about a system which excludes those who prefer not to join a union.· The gravest doubt which has assailed historians about Charlemagne's moral and educational programme is whether it had much effect.· I have grave doubts about that.· Simply as a proposition this is open to grave doubt. ► error· What sins, what meannesses, what grave errors I had committed in the previous ten years had been forgiven me.· It would be a grave error to oversimplify any of these outcomes.· He had committed a grave error in lending his approval, together with that of the Church he represented, to the Exhibition.· She had made - and with far less justification than her father - the same grave error as he.· He explained that we had made a grave error - it was Saturday afternoon.· But as we left the tarmac road and headed up the hill I made a grave error.· Here indeed, I thought, must lie some of those sins, meannesses and grave errors. ► goods· An abundance of grave goods, especially painted wares, accompanied the burials.· The other grave goods provide what little evidence we have for the economic basis and material culture of its population.· The deceased were deposited on their left side and the grave goods were reduced in quantity and included very little painted ware.· Tomb inscriptions, the coffin, statues, stelae and other grave goods therefore bore the name.· In many cultures, various objects, termed grave goods, were commonly deposited with human burials.· All the associated grave goods belonged to the fourth century, the cemetery itself overlying earlier field boundaries and enclosures.· He had no grave goods and that marked him pretty low both on the social scale and with the archaeologists.· A similar ambivalence prevailed in the provision of grave goods as in the bestowal of presents. ► misgiving· Orkney Presbytery followed suit, stating their very grave misgivings about the procedures followed by Orkney Islands Council.· As Soap beached the craft and ushered the two ashore, Pooley viewed the place with the gravest misgivings. ► mistake· Although, now she came to think about it, maybe such caution had been a grave mistake. ► problem· That is the gravest problem of all.· The graver problems await the end of the war.· Last night, it shouldered a graver problem.· I shall argue that the suggestions which have been made carry with them grave problems. ► reservation· The Opposition have grave reservations about the Bill.· Indeed, Humphrey had privately expressed grave reservations about the war, which Johnson had ignored. ► risk· In other words there is a grave risk of escalation.· Some of these women took grave risks to start their businesses and faced even more danger when they succeeded. ► site· The president will also visit the grave sites of 12 youths killed in recent bombings.· Two acres have been added to its six-acre collection of grave sites. ► threat· The advance of the disease presents a grave threat to the livestock industry.· Hayek views the growing dominance of the conception of law as thesis as posing a grave threat to liberty.· The inflationary spiral constituted a grave threat which, if not halted, could jeopardise the entire economy.· It can indeed present a grave threat to democracy.· But the gravest threat to health is posed by the total collapse of the economy, and the ensuing chronic poverty. PHRASES FROM OTHER ENTRIES► from (the) cradle to (the) grave 1grave problems, situations, or worries are very great or bad → serious: Matthew’s life is in grave danger. The report expressed grave concern over the technicians’ lack of training. I have grave doubts about his ability. The situation is becoming very grave.► see thesaurus at seriousRegisterIn everyday English, people usually use serious rather than grave, and seriously rather than gravely:· I have serious doubts about whether he’s up to the job.· I’m seriously worried about her.2looking or sounding quiet and serious, especially because something important or worrying has happened SYN sombre: Turnbull’s face was grave as he told them about the accident.—gravely adverb: Adam nodded gravely. We are gravely concerned (=very concerned) about these developments. → gravity
grave1 noungrave2 adjectivegrave3 adjective gravegrave3 /ɡrɑːv/ adjective ExamplesEXAMPLES FROM THE CORPUS word sets
WORD SETS► Letters & punctuation CollocationsA, nounABC, nounalpha, nounalphabet, nounalphabetical, adjectiveampersand, nounapostrophe, nounasterisk, nounB, nounbeta, nounblock capitals, nounblock letters, nounbrace, nounbracket, nounbracket, verbC, nouncapital, nouncapital, adjectivecapitalize, verbcaps, cedilla, nouncircumflex, nounclause, nouncolon, nouncomma, nounconsonant, nounCyrillic, adjectiveD, noundash, noundelta, noundiacritic, nounditto, nounE, nounexclamation mark, nounF, nounG, noungamma, nounGothic, adjectivegrave, adjectiveH, nounhyphen, nounI, nounIPA, nounJ, nounK, nounL, nounletter, nounlower case, nounM, nounN, nounNHS, the, O, nounoblique, nounomega, nounP, nounparenthesis, nounperiod, nounpunctuate, verbpunctuation, nounpunctuation mark, nounQ, nounquestion mark, nounquestion tag, nounquotation mark, nounR, nounrune, nounS, nounschwa, nounscript, nounsemicolon, nounslash, nounsmall, adjectivespeech marks, nounsquare bracket, nounstar, nounstenography, nounstress mark, nounT, nountilde, nounU, nounumlaut, nounupper case, nounV, nounvowel, nounW, nounX, nounY, nounZ, nounzed, noun COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES► grave concern Phrases (=very great concern)· This disagreement was a matter of grave concern to the US. ► grave/serious danger (=very great)· You have put us all in grave danger. ► dig a hole/trench/grave etc They dig a small hole in the sand to bury their eggs. ► serious/grave doubts· They have some serious doubts as to his honesty. ► a grave error (=extremely serious, with serious results)· He has committed a grave error. ► grave/great/serious/severe misgivings (=serious and important worries)· Most of us have grave misgivings about the idea of human cloning. ► a serious/grave mistake· There was a serious mistake in the instructions. ► a serious/grave mistake· The decision to take the money was a serious mistake. ► great/grave/serious peril The economy is now in grave peril. ► serious/grave reservations· They had serious reservations about the plan. ► a serious/grave risk (=real and big)· The most serious risk of flooding this evening is on the River Wye. ► as silent as the grave (=completely silent in a mysterious or uncomfortable way) ► unmarked grave an unmarked grave ► a war grave· He had gone with a friend to visit the war graves in Flanders. COLLOCATIONS FROM THE CORPUSADVERB► so· It was so grave, so mad.· If the matters concerned had not been so grave, it would have been equal to any comedy. ► very· Two of those wounded have very grave injuries.· The charges in this case are very grave, and they are entirely false.· He stopped dictating to take a phone call and I saw his face become shocked, then very grave.· It is on the contrary a very grave flaw, latent but pernicious in its effects. NOUN► concern· However, there was grave concern about the future of the avionic department there.· He told them he had received reports that had caused him grave concern.· As for Stewart, the family developed grave concerns about his health.· This matter is of the gravest concern to me, and to the good name of this unit.· The Parish Council have asked me to express their grave concern that such an incident could have occurred at all.· They watched with grave concern the formidable ascent of U2.· It is a matter of grave concern. ► consequence· This has grave consequences for Britain.· Even a tiny fling, even a protected one, can still have the gravest consequence.· The paradox is all the stranger because the power shortage has had predictably grave consequences for economic growth. ► danger· Mr. Flannery Is there not a grave danger of the former Soviet Union lapsing into anarchy?· I put myself to sleep each night by imagining that I am in grave danger.· The building now stands in grave danger from the weather, derelict and in ruins.· Huamanga, which had rejected all political influence, had few partisans in Congress and thereby found itself in grave danger.· Lynda La Plante is in grave danger of burning herself out and it's no laughing matter.· There is also a grave danger that the essence of education will be forgotten.· I have placed you in the gravest danger.· The four said their actions were reasonable, given what they alleged were the potentially grave dangers to the environment. ► doubt· But there is grave doubt among environmentalists as to whether the Government will fulfil its promises according to schedule.· I had grave doubts about where he might take it.· In my talk with Alec he himself expressed grave doubts whether he wished to take it on.· There must, too, be the gravest doubts about a system which excludes those who prefer not to join a union.· The gravest doubt which has assailed historians about Charlemagne's moral and educational programme is whether it had much effect.· I have grave doubts about that.· Simply as a proposition this is open to grave doubt. ► error· What sins, what meannesses, what grave errors I had committed in the previous ten years had been forgiven me.· It would be a grave error to oversimplify any of these outcomes.· He had committed a grave error in lending his approval, together with that of the Church he represented, to the Exhibition.· She had made - and with far less justification than her father - the same grave error as he.· He explained that we had made a grave error - it was Saturday afternoon.· But as we left the tarmac road and headed up the hill I made a grave error.· Here indeed, I thought, must lie some of those sins, meannesses and grave errors. ► goods· An abundance of grave goods, especially painted wares, accompanied the burials.· The other grave goods provide what little evidence we have for the economic basis and material culture of its population.· The deceased were deposited on their left side and the grave goods were reduced in quantity and included very little painted ware.· Tomb inscriptions, the coffin, statues, stelae and other grave goods therefore bore the name.· In many cultures, various objects, termed grave goods, were commonly deposited with human burials.· All the associated grave goods belonged to the fourth century, the cemetery itself overlying earlier field boundaries and enclosures.· He had no grave goods and that marked him pretty low both on the social scale and with the archaeologists.· A similar ambivalence prevailed in the provision of grave goods as in the bestowal of presents. ► misgiving· Orkney Presbytery followed suit, stating their very grave misgivings about the procedures followed by Orkney Islands Council.· As Soap beached the craft and ushered the two ashore, Pooley viewed the place with the gravest misgivings. ► mistake· Although, now she came to think about it, maybe such caution had been a grave mistake. ► problem· That is the gravest problem of all.· The graver problems await the end of the war.· Last night, it shouldered a graver problem.· I shall argue that the suggestions which have been made carry with them grave problems. ► reservation· The Opposition have grave reservations about the Bill.· Indeed, Humphrey had privately expressed grave reservations about the war, which Johnson had ignored. ► risk· In other words there is a grave risk of escalation.· Some of these women took grave risks to start their businesses and faced even more danger when they succeeded. ► site· The president will also visit the grave sites of 12 youths killed in recent bombings.· Two acres have been added to its six-acre collection of grave sites. ► threat· The advance of the disease presents a grave threat to the livestock industry.· Hayek views the growing dominance of the conception of law as thesis as posing a grave threat to liberty.· The inflationary spiral constituted a grave threat which, if not halted, could jeopardise the entire economy.· It can indeed present a grave threat to democracy.· But the gravest threat to health is posed by the total collapse of the economy, and the ensuing chronic poverty. PHRASES FROM OTHER ENTRIES► from (the) cradle to (the) grave a grave accent is a mark put above a letter in some languages such as French to show the pronunciation, for example è → acute, circumflex
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