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catacomb
[kat-uh-kohm]
noun
Usually catacombs. an underground cemetery, especially one consisting of tunnels and rooms with recesses dug out for coffins and tombs.
the Catacombs, the subterranean burial chambers of the early Christians in and near Rome, Italy.
an underground passageway, especially one full of twists and turns.
catacomb
/ -ˌkuːm, ˈkætəˌkəʊm /
noun
(usually plural) an underground burial place, esp the galleries at Rome, consisting of tunnels with vaults or niches leading off them for tombs
a series of interconnected underground tunnels or caves
Other 51Թ Forms
- catacumbal adjective
51Թ History and Origins
51Թ History and Origins
Origin of catacomb1
Example Sentences
How arduous was it to convince the Parisian officials to let you shoot in the catacombs?
The catacombs beneath a crumbling city have cracked wide open, revealing a vast, spiraling dungeon teeming with strange beasts and stranger plants.
Details abound, as we enter the castle’s catacombs amid a sky-high skull wall and pass the likes of the Wolfman, the Mummy and the Creature from the Black Lagoon.
Stewart questioned: "Is there no one who can offer a more nuanced analysis of our newly formulated position in this conflict, preferably in some type of catacomb or echoey tunnel?"
“If you wiggle through this hole, you’ll fall through it and down into the catacombs.”
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