Need another word that means the same as “coffin”? Find 3 synonyms and 30 related words for “coffin” in this overview.
Table Of Contents:
The synonyms of “Coffin” are: casket, box, sarcophagus
Coffin as a Noun
Definitions of "Coffin" as a noun
According to the Oxford Dictionary of English, “coffin” as a noun can have the following definitions:
- An old and unsafe aircraft or ship.
- Box in which a corpse is buried or cremated.
- A long, narrow box, typically of wood, in which a dead body is buried or cremated.
Synonyms of "Coffin" as a noun (3 Words)
box | The quantity contained in a box. The flowchart contained many boxes. |
casket | A small wooden box for cremated ashes. A small brass casket containing four black opals. |
sarcophagus | A stone coffin (usually bearing sculpture or inscriptions. |
Usage Examples of "Coffin" as a noun
- They lowered her coffin into the ground.
- A clapped-out one-gun flying coffin.
Associations of "Coffin" (30 Words)
bier | A movable frame on which a coffin or a corpse is placed before burial or cremation or on which they are carried to the grave. We followed the bier to the graveyard. |
burial | The ritual placing of a corpse in a grave. His remains were shipped home for burial. |
bury | Dismiss from the mind; stop remembering. He ran through to bury a right foot shot inside the near post. |
casket | Enclose in a casket. A small brass casket containing four black opals. |
cemetery | A large burial ground, especially one not in a churchyard. A military cemetery. |
crypt | A cellar or vault or underground burial chamber (especially beneath a church. |
entomb | Bury or trap within something. The pharaohs were entombed in the pyramids. |
epigraph | A short quotation or saying at the beginning of a book or chapter, intended to suggest its theme. |
epitaph | A phrase or form of words written in memory of a person who has died, especially as an inscription on a tombstone. The story makes a sorry epitaph to a great career. |
excavate | Form by hollowing. Clothing and weapons were excavated from the burial site. |
funeral | A sermon delivered at a funeral. A funeral service. |
grave | Dignified and somber in manner or character and committed to keeping promises. Grave responsibilities. |
gravestone | A stone that is used to mark a grave. |
ground | Of a batter be put out by hitting a ball on the ground to a fielder who throws it to or touches first base before the batter touches that base. A football ground. |
inhume | Place in a grave or tomb. No hand his bones shall gather or inhume. |
inscription | The action of inscribing something. The inscription of memorable utterances on durable materials. |
inter | Place (a corpse) in a grave or tomb, typically with funeral rites. He was interred with the military honours due to him. |
interment | The burial of a corpse in a grave or tomb, typically with funeral rites. The day of interment. |
mausoleum | A large burial chamber, usually above ground. The cathedral was built in 1517 as a royal mausoleum. |
mortician | One whose business is the management of funerals. |
mortuary | Of or relating to or characteristic of death. A mortuary temple. |
mummification | A condition resembling that of a mummy. Bureaucratic mummification in red tape. |
necropolis | A tract of land used for burials. |
pharaoh | A ruler in ancient Egypt. The time of the pharaohs. |
plaque | A flat counter used in gambling. Plaque around gum margins can lead to gingivitis. |
quietus | Death or something that causes death, regarded as a release from life. |
sarcophagus | A stone coffin, typically adorned with a sculpture or inscription and associated with the ancient civilizations of Egypt, Rome, and Greece. |
sepulcher | A chamber that is used as a grave. |
tomb | A place for the burial of a corpse especially beneath the ground and marked by a tombstone. None escape the tomb. |
tombstone | An advertisement listing the underwriters or firms associated with a new issue of shares, bonds, warrants, etc. His grin exposed his yellowed teeth like a row of tombstones. |