coffin
morgue
morgue
No. 'Grave' means a hole people are buried in, or secondly 'very serious' .
a good one would be grave
The grave. Actually the English word, "grave" is the equivalent of the Hebrew and Greek words "Hades" and "Sheol," which means "mankind's common grave." These words have been interpreted as the word hell. That is actually what the word hell means, and has nothing to do with a firey place of torment.
The English word "grave" comes from the Latin word "gravis," which means heavy or serious.
aside
There are many uses of the word stage. A theatrical stage is sometimes called a deck. Another word for stage is platform. A scaffold is sometimes called a stage. Stage is used medically to mean the extent of an illness. as in 'stage 4' cancer. It can be a resting place on a journey or the height of a river, as in 'flood stage.'
No, the word before is an adverb (Call before you come.); a preposition (The case before the court...); and a conjunction (I'll be in my grave before I see that money).
A six letter word for grave is sedate.
No it simply means He was in the grave. The Greek word here is 'hades' which is equivalent to the Hebrew 'sheol' and means grave or pit. You question has more of a leaning towards Dante's 'Inferno.'
The word buried is a verb. It is the past tense of the verb bury.