What is another word for monstrance?

Pronunciation: [mˈɒnstɹəns] (IPA)

Monstrance is a ceremonial container used in the Catholic Church to display the Eucharistic host during adoration. Synonyms for this word can include ostensorium, a term derived from the Latin word ostendere, meaning to show. Another similar term is lunula, which refers to a crescent-shaped holder used to display the host. Ciborium, on the other hand, refers to a vessel used to hold the Eucharistic bread or hosts before they are consecrated and can also be used to replace the word monstrance in some instances. Finally, reliquary is also a container used in the Catholic Church for sacred relics, which can serve as a synonym for monstrance due to its ceremonial and sacred purpose.

What are the hypernyms for Monstrance?

A hypernym is a word with a broad meaning that encompasses more specific words called hyponyms.
  • Other hypernyms:

    chalice, sacred object, altar vessel, consecrated vessel, religious artifact, sacred vessel.

What are the hyponyms for Monstrance?

Hyponyms are more specific words categorized under a broader term, known as a hypernym.
  • hyponyms for monstrance (as nouns)

Usage examples for Monstrance

To Jem Hardy, who ventured on a delicate re-monstrance one evening, he was less patient, and displayed a newly acquired dignity which was a source of considerable embarrassment to that well-meaning gentleman.
"At Sunwich Port, Complete"
W.W. Jacobs
No two rooms were alike; each possessed some marked characteristic of its own-one bedroom, for example, was distinguished by its fourpost bed with its paintings on the canopy and head-another, by its little two-light high window with Adam and Eve in stained glass; another with a little square-window containing a crucifix, which was generally concealed by a sliding panel; another by two secret cupboards over the fire-place, and its recess fitted as an oratory; another by a magnificent piece of tapestry representing Saint Clara and Saint Thomas of Aquin, each holding a monstrance, with a third great monstrance in the centre, supported by angels.
"By What Authority?"
Robert Hugh Benson
At the end was a marble altar, six lighted tapers, and gilt ornaments, candelabra full of tapers, and under the tabernacle, a very small monstrance, which sparkled in the light of the tapers.
"En Route"
J.-K. (Joris-Karl) Huysmans

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