crypt

noun

1
a
: a chamber (such as a vault) wholly or partly underground
especially : a vault under the main floor of a church
b
: a chamber in a mausoleum
2
a
: an anatomical pit or depression
b
: a simple tubular gland

Did you know?

Hidden under the main floor of a great church is often a large room, often with a tomb as its centerpiece. Many major European churches were built over the remains of a saint—the Vatican's great St. Peter's Basilica is an example—and instead of having the coffin buried, it was often given its spacious room below ground level. In a large aboveground tomb, or mausoleum, there may be several small chambers for individual coffins, also called crypts; when the comic book Tales from the Crypt made its first appearance in 1950, it was this meaning that the authors were referring to.

Examples of crypt in a Sentence

the old church's crypt is the final resting place for the president and his beloved wife
Recent Examples on the Web
Examples are automatically compiled from online sources to show current usage. Read More Opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback.
The House of Delamain specializes in cognac’s finest cru, Grande Champagne, and takes a non-interventionist and artisanal approach to reflect the history from the pre-cellar or a 13th century crypt that houses the once active antique alambique. Alissa Fitzgerald, Forbes, 17 Dec. 2024 He is buried in a crypt at Resurrection Catholic Cemetery in Justice, not far from his parents and sisters. Christy Gutowski, Chicago Tribune, 11 Nov. 2024 And if crypts don’t work out, there are other options. Adam Czajka, IEEE Spectrum, 29 Aug. 2019 Gangster Bugsy Siegal, whose 1947 murder remains unsolved, is also a crypt resident. Michael Goldstein, Forbes, 31 Oct. 2024 See all Example Sentences for crypt 

Word History

Etymology

borrowed from Latin crypta, crupta "covered passage, underground room," borrowed from Greek kryptḗ "underground room," noun derivative from feminine of kryptós "hidden, secret," verbal adjective of krýptein "to hide, conceal," of uncertain origin

Note: The verb krýptein is phonetically and semantically close to kalýptein "to cover, conceal," and the two may have influenced each other. Other forms with which krýptein has been compared, such as Old Church Slavic kryjǫ, kryti "to cover, hide, shroud," Lithuanian kráuju, kráuti "to pile up," are too distant phonetically to allow realistic reconstruction of an Indo-European verbal base. The alternation in consonants between kryp- (in krýptein, kryptós), kryb- (in krýbdēn "secretly"), and kryph- (in kryphêi "in secret," -kryphos "hidden") is apparently the result of both assimilation and analogy.

First Known Use

1583, in the meaning defined at sense 1a

Time Traveler
The first known use of crypt was in 1583

Dictionary Entries Near crypt

Cite this Entry

“Crypt.” Merriam-Webster.com Dictionary, Merriam-Webster, https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/crypt. Accessed 23 Dec. 2024.

Kids Definition

crypt

noun
: an underground chamber
also : a chamber for burial

Medical Definition

crypt

noun
1
: an anatomical pit, depression, or invagination
a developing tooth in its bony crypt
see tonsillar crypt
2
: a simple tubular gland (as a crypt of Lieberkühn)

More from Merriam-Webster on crypt

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