| 释义 | 
		char·nel I. \ˈchärnəl, -ȧn-\ noun (-s) Etymology: Middle English, from Middle French, from Medieval Latin carnale, from Late Latin, neuter of carnalis fleshly — more at carnal 1. obsolete  : cemetery 2.   a. or charnel house  : a building, chamber, or other area in which bodies or bones are deposited  b.  : a mortuary chapel II. adjective 1.  : constituting a charnel 2.  : gruesomely indicative or suggestive of death : sepulchral, ghastly  < a chest filled full of dead men's bones. A charnel smell came from them — Hope Muntz >  < devices to which the charnel superstition of the monks has given rise — E.A.Poe > III. noun (-s) Etymology: Middle English, from Middle French chernel, from Latin cardinalis of a hinge — more at cardinal  obsolete  : a hinge especially of a helmet |