To consecrate something, for example a building is to have a religious person make this place holy. After that the building or land is called hallowed.
No. The word hallow is a verb, to hallow, generally meaning to consecrate ("to make holy").
Hallow- to make holy; sanctify; consecrate. Sentence: Lord, hallow be thy name.
To render holy by means of religious rites. (bless consecrate sanctify)
Hallowed is the past tense or past participle of the word hallow. Hallow means to honor as holy, make holy, or consecrate. If something is hallowed, it is greatly respected or greatly revered.
you have just used hollowness in a sentence
What Mr. Lincoln was saying there was that we cannot add to the importance of this ground any more than the blood of the soldiers who fought there have already done. consecrate - to make (something) an object of honor or veneration hallow - to respect or honor greatly; revere
Consecrate, hallow this is for those of you who have APEX
What Mr. Lincoln was saying there was that we cannot add to the importance of this ground any more than the blood of the soldiers who fought there have already done. consecrate - to make (something) an object of honor or veneration hallow - to respect or honor greatly; revere
donate, set aside for special use, sanctify, anoint, bless, consecrate, hallow, set apart
But in a larger sense we cannot dedicate we can not consecrate we can not hallow this ground.
sanctify, dedicate, ordain, exalt, anoint, consecrate, hallow
If I knew the freaking answer I wouldn't be on this stupid page