<span class="searchmatch">tree</span> <span class="searchmatch">burials</span> plural of <span class="searchmatch">tree</span> <span class="searchmatch">burial</span>...
<span class="searchmatch">tree</span> <span class="searchmatch">burial</span> (countable and uncountable, plural <span class="searchmatch">tree</span> <span class="searchmatch">burials</span>) Disposal of the dead by placing the corpse among the branches of a <span class="searchmatch">tree</span> or in a hollow trunk...
-ɛɹiəl English Wikipedia has an article on: <span class="searchmatch">burial</span> Wikipedia <span class="searchmatch">burial</span> (countable and uncountable, plural <span class="searchmatch">burials</span>) The act of burying; interment; placing remains...
See also: <span class="searchmatch">tree</span>-, <span class="searchmatch">Tree</span>, <span class="searchmatch">TREE</span>, and <span class="searchmatch">tréë</span> Picture dictionary: <span class="searchmatch">tree</span> (1) Etymology <span class="searchmatch">tree</span> Proto-Indo-European *drew- Proto-Indo-European *-om Proto-Germanic *trewą...
IPA(key): /ˈpuːˌhɑu̯tɑus/, [ˈpuːˌhɑ̝u̯t̪ɑ̝us̠] Rhymes: -ɑutɑus Syllabification(key): puu‧hau‧ta‧us Hyphenation(key): puu‧hauta‧us puuhautaus <span class="searchmatch">tree</span> <span class="searchmatch">burial</span>...
See also: burialplace <span class="searchmatch">burial</span>-place (plural <span class="searchmatch">burial</span>-places) Alternative form of <span class="searchmatch">burial</span> place 1821, James Fenimore Cooper, chapter XIV, in The Spy[1], H...
Jyutping: syu6 zong3 Yale: syuh jong Cantonese Pinyin: sy6 dzong3 Guangdong Romanization: xu6 zong3 Sinological IPA (key): /syː²² t͡sɔːŋ³³/ 樹葬 <span class="searchmatch">tree</span> <span class="searchmatch">burial</span>...
things. linn "city" → linnastu "metropolitan area" kalm "<span class="searchmatch">burial</span> mound" → kalmistu "graveyard" puu "<span class="searchmatch">tree</span>" → puistu "a part of a forest with the same features"...
that <span class="searchmatch">tree</span> seeming dead, will restore it self from the root, and its dry and exuccous leaves resume their verdure again — Sir Thomas Browne, Urne-<span class="searchmatch">Burial</span> (Penguin...
Browne, Urne-<span class="searchmatch">Burial</span>, Penguin, published 2005, page 6: And the Chinois without cremation or urnall interrment of their bodies, make use of <span class="searchmatch">trees</span> and much burning...