hearse
English

Funeral carriage
Etymology
From Middle English herse, hers, herce, from Old French herce, from Medieval Latin hercia, from Latin herpicem, hirpex; ultimately from Oscan 𐌇𐌉𐌓𐌐𐌖𐌔 (hirpus, “wolf”), a reference to the teeth. The Oscan term is related to Latin hirsutus (“bristly, shaggy”). Doublet of hirsute.
Noun
hearse (plural hearses)
- A hind (female deer) in the second year of her age.
- A framework of wood or metal placed over the coffin or tomb of a deceased person, and covered with a pall; also, a temporary canopy bearing wax lights and set up in a church, under which the coffin was placed during the funeral ceremonies.
- A grave, coffin, tomb, or sepulchral monument.
- Ben Jonson
- underneath this marble hearse
- Fairfax
- Beside the hearse a fruitful palm tree grows.
- Longfellow
- who lies beneath this sculptured hearse
- Ben Jonson
- A bier or handbarrow for conveying the dead to the grave.
- Shakespeare
- Set down, set down your honourable load, / If honour may be shrouded in a hearse.
- Shakespeare
- A carriage or vehicle specially adapted or used for transporting a dead person to the place of funeral or to the grave.
Translations
hind on her second year
framework placed over coffin or tomb
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grave, coffin, tomb
bier or handbarrow for carrying the dead
vehicle for transporting dead
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References
- hearse in Webster’s Revised Unabridged Dictionary, G. & C. Merriam, 1913.
- “hearse” in the Collins English Dictionary, Glasgow: HarperCollins Publishers.
- “hearse”, in OED Online
, Oxford: Oxford University Press, launched 2000.
Verb
hearse (third-person singular simple present hearses, present participle hearsing, simple past and past participle hearsed)
- (dated) To enclose in a hearse; to entomb.
- 1596-97, William Shakespeare, The Merchant of Venice, Act III Scene 1
- I would my daughter were dead at my foot, and the jewels in her ear! would she were hearsed at my foot, and the ducats in her coffin!
- 1596-97, William Shakespeare, The Merchant of Venice, Act III Scene 1
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