inhume การใช้
- The grave contained a single inhumed body in a coffin, accompanied by remains of three cremations.
- Occupants and inhabitants sound a bit too lively, he says; decedents and the inhumed too pretentious.
- The inhumed were placed in a flexed position in pits lined with stones, plaster, or clay.
- The bodies were inhumed in wooden coffins and covered with kurgans, or interred in wooden or stone chambers.
- Six individuals were inhumed in supine and four in prone position, of which only three showed a fully stretched body.
- Some of these burials were inhumed, and others were cremated, while the earlier bones were deposited alongside Windmill Hill pottery.
- It is accepted that an Assassin may find it necessary to inhume bodyguards, including other Assassins, while on a commission.
- Little evidence of inhumed burials was found, in part because they did not survive well in the acidic soils surrounding the site.
- To promote the album, they first toured Europe for four weeks, together with Disavowed, Vile, Inhume, and Mangled.
- Some of this culture's burials are skeletal-the dead were inhumed in solid wood log coffins, while other crematory, both identically equipped.
- Only children were inhumed; as they hadn't passed a come of age passage ritual, due of their age, they couldn't be incinerated.
- On 23 December his body was inhumed into the eastern side of the churchyard at St James the Less Church, near to where many of his deceased children had been buried.
- His one recorded act was to direct the Assassins'Guild to'inhume'the tourist Agatean Empire; the attempt failed ( " The Colour of Magic " ).
- It is possible that the decision to begin inhuming bodies occurred because families believed that inhumation was a kinder, and less disturbing burial rite than cremation, thus necessitating a shift in burial monument.
- For instance, the gradual decline in the appearance of grave goods and the increasing use of inhumed bodies located in a west-to-east orientation have been attributed to Christian beliefs about the afterlife.
- The Nervan-Antonine dynasty also marks the first time that an Emperor was depicted with a beard ( Emperor Hadrian ), and one of the first times that a deceased Emperor was inhumed rather than cremated ( Antoninus Pius ).
- In various respects & ndash; such as the orientation and position of the inhumed body and the variety of structures within or around the grave & ndash; these princely burials are similar to the wider array of contemporary Final Phase furnished burials.
- The dead could be inhumed in pits, wooden chambers, boats, or stone crists & Occasional very richly furnished graves were filled with objects, pots of food and drink and sacrificed animals, while others contained only the remains of the dead person s dress ( Andr閚 ).
- Still in one of few sites, where researchers have found a significant number of human remains ( Poduri Dealul Ghindaru in Romania ), it seems possible in analyzing the findings, that in the early Cucuteni Culture, the children and infants were inhumed near the houses or even under the house floor.
- An alternative explanation for the decline in grave goods is that the Middle Anglo-Saxon period could have witnessed a change in the structure of inheritance; for instance, whereas weapons were previously inhumed along with their owner, there could have been an increasing emphasis on such items being inherited by the deceased's kin.
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