0 an object, tradition, or system from the past that continues to exist:
1 an object from the past, esp. one that has no modern use but is often valued for its meaning or importance in history:
The ship was a relic of the Spanish-American War.
All of this liturgical and musical restructuring occurred in conjunction with a translation of relics, an architectural building site and even a hagiographic ' building site'.
All the miracles occurred after the translation of the relics.
They could be relics of either kin-group ancestors or comrades fallen in battle.
As earlier techniques for the reproduction of kinship came under colonial attacks, the position of relics and body fragments experienced considerable displacements.
Interchangeable vehicles of gifts and sacred forces varied from charms, witch-substance, relics and shrines, or the body of the ritual specialist him/herself.
Obviously the reserves offer the possibility of preserving vast landscape relics but it concerns perforce more or less local patterns.
In dunite pods, relics of olivine are set in ser pentine with some cumulus and intercumulus chromite.
As such, they are also relics of an earlier age, old supernaturals who were power ful even before the present age began.
中文繁体
遺物, 遺跡, 遺風…
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遗物, 遗迹, 遗风…
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reliquia, vestigio…
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relíquia…
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arta kalan eşya, hatıra, yadigar…
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vestige, relique…
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památka, relikvie…
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levn, relikvie…
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