relic
noun /ˈrelɪk/
/ˈrelɪk/
- relic (of/from something) an object, a tradition, a system, etc. that has survived from the past
- The building stands as the last remaining relic of the town's cotton industry.
- Videotapes may already seem like relics of a bygone era.
- The pictures on the walls were relics from the days before her marriage.
- Our transportation system is a relic of the past.
Extra ExamplesTopics Historyc2- He seemed to view her as a quaint relic of the past.
- It was the last relic of the old system.
- Most of these guns are relics from the Boer War.
- They believe that hunting is a relic of the past and are calling for it to be banned.
- This silver belt buckle is the only relic of the battle that survives.
- a relic of the time when people hunted their own food
- a relic of the time when people travelled by horse and carriage
- relics of a bygone age
Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadjective- ancient
- last
- quaint
- …
- discover
- unearth
- preserve
- …
- survive
- relic from
- a relic of an age
- a relic of a time
- a relic of the past
- …
- a part of the body or clothing of a holy person, or something that they owned, that is kept after their death and respected as a religious object
- holy relics
Extra ExamplesTopics Religion and festivalsc2- The relics were discovered in a lead box in the ruins of an abbey.
- The duke secretly removed the relics from the reliquary.
Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadjective- ancient
- last
- quaint
- …
- discover
- unearth
- preserve
- …
- survive
- relic from
- a relic of an age
- a relic of a time
- a relic of the past
- …
Word OriginMiddle English: from Old French relique (originally plural), from Latin reliquiae feminine plural (used as a noun) of reliquus ‘remaining’, based on linquere ‘to leave’.