What is another word for columbarium?

Pronunciation: [kˌɒləmbˈe͡əɹi͡əm] (IPA)

A columbarium is a structure typically used for the storage of urns containing the cremated remains of loved ones. But there are some other words and phrases that can be used to describe this type of edifice. For example, some may refer to it as a "memorial wall," particularly if it is mounted on an exterior wall. Alternatively, it may also be called a "cinerary niche," which speaks to the specific location within the structure where urns can be placed. Still others may use the phrase "urn garden," particularly if the columbarium is located outdoors and is surrounded by carefully tended landscaping. Regardless of what it is called, the columbarium serves as a fitting tribute to those who have passed on.

What are the hypernyms for Columbarium?

A hypernym is a word with a broad meaning that encompasses more specific words called hyponyms.
  • Other hypernyms:

    necropolis, tomb, Burial repository, Cemetery structure, Funerary structure, Sepulchral structure.

What are the hyponyms for Columbarium?

Hyponyms are more specific words categorized under a broader term, known as a hypernym.

Usage examples for Columbarium

A quantity of marble statues, of but ordinary execution, and colossal masks of terra-cotta, constituted the chief ornaments of the columbarium.
"Dreams, Waking Thoughts, and Incidents"
William Beckford
Our next walk was to see the columbarium, a very solemn looking edifice, where probably the families of higher rank only at Pompeii, deposited the urns of their deceased kindred.
"Dreams, Waking Thoughts, and Incidents"
William Beckford
With them I went many delightful expeditions into the distant Campagna: to Ostia, with its then still gorgeous marbles and melancholy tower and pine; to Castel Fusano, with its palace, like that of the Sleeping Beauty, rising lovely from its green lawns, with its pine avenue and decaying vases with golden-flowered aloes, and beyond all the grand old forest with its deep green recesses and gigantic pines and bays and ilexes, its deep still pools and its abysses of wood, bounded on one side by the Campagna, and on the other by the sea; to Collatia, with its woods of violets and anemones, and its purling brook and broken tower; to Cerbara, with its colossal caves and violet banks, and laurustinus waving like angels' wings through the great rifts; to Veii, with its long circuit of ruins, its tunnelled Ponte Sodo and its mysterious columbarium and tomb.
"Story of My Life, volumes 1-3"
Augustus J. C. Hare

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