sarcophagus
Sarcophagus, it literally means flesh eater, applied to stone coffins or coffin receptacles in more modern mausoleums.
mohawk in iriquois means "flesh eater"
mohawk in iriquois means "flesh eater"
"Mohawk" means flesh-eater in some language. as they ate their enemies flesh.
A sarcophagus is a stone container for a coffin or body. The word comes from Greek "sarx" meaning "flesh", and "phagein" meaning "to eat", so sarcophagus means "eater of flesh"....Sarcophagi were usually made by being carved, decorated or built ornately. Some were built to be freestanding above ground, as a part of an elaborate tomb or tombs. Others were made for burial, or were placed in crypts. In ancient Egypt, a sarcophagus was usually the external layer of protection for a royal mummy, with several layers of coffins nested within.Sarcophagus: a coffin-like structure, hollow, used as a way to respect the dead by egyptians
Pertaining to flesh is the English equivalent of 'carni-'. The Latin prefix derives from the Latin feminine gender noun 'caro', which means 'flesh'. The genitive form, as the object of possession, is 'carnis'.
The root "sarco" means flesh or relating to muscle tissue in Latin. It is commonly used in medical terms related to muscles, such as sarcoma (a type of cancer that arises from connective tissues) or sarcopenia (age-related muscle loss).
Modern scholars use the Greek term "sarcophagus" for any elaborate coffins such as the mummy-cases used for royal burials in ancient Egypt. The Greeks used the word to refer to a particular type of limestone coffin (it literally means flesh-eater) which was intended to decompose the body very quickly, so the use of this word for ancient Egyptian coffins (which were intended to preserve a body for all eternity) is extremely ironic.
This Greek term means, basically to "eat" or "devour." The verb form φαγήσω dates back to Homer. It is useful to remember "phago" in reference to the esophagus ("In-Eater"), a carcophagus ("Flesh Eater"), or John C. Taylor's chronophage ("Time Eater") clock in Cambridge .
Carnivore literally means "meat eater" which is composed in two parts of Latin. "Carne" which means meat or flesh and "vorare" which means to eat or devour. I hope this answers helps you!
A sarcophagus is a funeral receptacle for a corpse, most commonly carved or cut from stone. The word "sarcophagus" comes from the Greek sarx meaning "flesh", and phageinmeaning "to eat", hence sarkophagus means "flesh-eating"; from the phrase lithos sarkophagos. Since lithos is Greek for stone, lithos sarcophagos means 'flesh eating stone'. The word came to refer to a particular kind of limestone that was thought to decompose the flesh of corpses interred within it.
Closing me in like a coffin would be describing how tight the area around you feels. There is not a lot of room in a coffin.