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Showing posts with label Moses. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Moses. Show all posts

Sunday, 20 November 2011

Stuart's Daily Word Spot: Tablet

Venus de Milo. Louvre Museum.Image via Wikipedia
Tablet: noun - a flat slab of stone, metal, or wood carrying an inscription, carving, or picture; a slab used as a roofing or flooring tile; a rigid card used in tablet-weaving; in Computing - a flat rectangular surface on which a stylus or finger may be moved to position a cursor on a screen; a flat ornament of precious metal or jewellery; a small flat or compressed piece of a solid substance; a portion of medicine or drug compressed into a solid flattish shape, intended to be swallowed whole; a cake of soap.

'Keep taking the tablets!'

'Porky Smellworthy spent the whole afternoon carving a tablet of soap into a miniature model of the Venus de Milo.'

'Moses descended the mountain, carrying stone tablets bearing the dozens of laws he'd been instructed to chisel into the rock, and, falling flat on his face, smashed most of them to smithereens.'

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Wednesday, 4 May 2011

Stuart's Daily Word Spot: Tabernacle

Moses and Joshua in the Tabernacle, c. 1896-19...Image via Wikipedia
Tabernacle: noun - Jewish History: curtained tent used as a temporary sanctuary for the Ark of the Covenant when the Israelites wandered in the wilderness; the Jewish Temple, continuing the sacred functions and associations of the earlier tabernacle; dwelling place, a place of abode; the place where God dwells; the human body when considered the temporary dwelling of the soul or centre of life; ornate canopied structure, as a tomb or shrine; canopied niche or recess for holding an image; Ecclesiastical: ornamented box or container for the pyx (itself a container for consecrated host used in Holy Communion); biblical use, a portable temporary dwelling, hut, tent, booth; temporary place of worship, particularly one used whilst churches were rebuilt following the Great Fire of London in 1666; meeting house or other place of worship; Nautical: socket or support for a ship’s mast, hinged at the base to allow it to be lowered to pass under bridges.

‘If you talk of the tabernacle out of context, I’ll never be sure whether you’re referring to the tent used in the desert, the original Temple or simply a place where your god lives; you’ll need to be more specific for me.’

‘Mary, unlatch the locking pin from the tabernacle so I can lower the mast before we crash into that bridge ahead.’

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