reliquary
English
WOTD – 19 July 2012
WOTD – 19 July 2014
Etymology
Borrowed from Middle French reliquaire (modern French reliquaire), from Late Latin reliquiarium, from rēliquia (“a relic”) (English relic), noun use of reliquus (“abandoned, left behind, relict”), from relinquō (“I relinquish”), from re- (“again”) and linquō (“I leave”), from Proto-Indo-European *leikʷ-.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈɹɛlɪkwɛɹi/, /ˈɹɛlɪkwəɹi/
Noun
reliquary (plural reliquaries)
- A container to hold or display religious relics.
- 1935, Francis Beeding, “4/1”, in The Norwich Victims:
- “… There is an ivory virgin of the fourteenth century. I once found a buyer for that piece, but the old boy would not sell it. […] The other piece—the one that concerns us—is known as the Borgia reliquary.”
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- (figuratively) An object that sustains the memory of past people or events.
- (law) A person who owes a balance.
Related terms
Translations
container for religious relics
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