catafalque
/ˈkatəfalk/
catafalque
English
Noun
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Definition
A platform used to display or convey a coffin during a funeral, often ornate.
Etymology
Borrowed from French catafalque, from Italian catafalco, from Vulgar Latin *catafalicum, from Ancient Greek κατά (katá, “down”) + Latin fala (“scaffolding, wooden siege tower”), which is from Etruscan. Also influenced scaffold.
Example Sentences
- "Until noon, the hour of the funeral, crowds continued to file by the plain pine coffin on its plain flower-covered catafalque."
- "After another brief funeral rite at Tzu Hu, the presidential casket was laid on the catafalque in the central hall of a temporary “mausoleum” and sealed with marble slabs. There, the body of President Chiang will rest pending permanent burial in the mainland after its recovery."
- "The period of official mourning was long-drawn-out even by the standards of the day; the funeral ceremony held in Avignon's cathedral lasted a full nine days, with the pope's catafalque hung with black silk beneath candelabra likewise draped in black."
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