释义 |
charnel /ˈtʃɑːn(ə)l /noun short for charnel house.Most knights' bones never got into charnels; they were safely enclosed in tombs inside a church....- The charnel was pulled down after the Reformation.
- Undoubtedly the charnel features had many other meanings to the people who used them, ones that leave no archaeologically identifiable traces.
adjectiveAssociated with death: I gagged on the charnel stench of the place...- A charnel stench filled the air and made them recoil in disgust.
- It is argued, based on archaeological and ethnohistoric data, that the layout of the mound, burials, and charnel features is patterned after Native American notions of the cosmos.
- The symbolic suitability of dark and dismal weather, however, is not the main reason Mary Shelley selected this particular month for the nativity of Victor's charnel creature.
OriginLate Middle English: from Old French, from medieval Latin carnale, neuter (used as a noun) of carnalis 'relating to flesh' (see carnal). |