tomb
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English 5++LDOCE 5++tomb /tuːm/ ●○○ noun [countable] MXa stone structure above or below the ground where a dead person is buried 坟墓,冢 the family tomb 家族坟墓
Examples from the Corpus
tomb• I went back to Ralemberg's house but it was all sealed up like a tomb so I left it alone.• Here also is the celebrated tomb of Saint Xavier.• Her body was taken to Sicily by three women, where the afflicted have been cured at her tomb for centuries.• His patronage is due to the high recovery rate of hernia sufferers at his tomb.• This made my delight at finding King Felin's tomb all the more great.• There was more to this, when Sammler was boarding in the tomb.• Strong traces of radioactivity were discovered in the tombs, which is credited with having arrested dissolution.• the tomb of Saint Francis• Once it used to be just child psychology but we now know that we develop all the time from womb to tomb.Origin tomb (1100-1200) Anglo-French tumbe, from Late Latin tumba “pile of earth under which a body is buried”, from Greek tymbostomb nounChinese
stone a above dead below where ground or structure Corpus the a
tomb
tomb /tuːm/
noun [countable]
the family tomb
tomb /tuːm/
noun [countable] Date: 1100-1200
Language: Anglo-French
Origin: tumbe, from Late Latin tumba 'pile of earth under which a body is buried', from Greek tymbos
a stone structure above or below the ground where a dead person is buried:Language: Anglo-French
Origin: tumbe, from Late Latin tumba 'pile of earth under which a body is buried', from Greek tymbos