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How to pronounce tabernacles in English?

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Type Words
Synonyms feast of booths, feast of tabernacles, succos, succoth, sukkoth
Type of church festival, jewish holy day, religious festival

Examples of tabernacles

tabernacles
Take the tabernacles, the elements set between the pairs of columns in the vestibule.
From the online.wsj.com
Windows would allow us to look through them, and tabernacles traditionally hold sculpture.
From the online.wsj.com
Most LDS tabernacles are in Utah and the vast majority of stakes do not have tabernacles.
From the en.wikipedia.org
Then there are the tabernacles and gospel rooms, the converted storefronts and the baptist chapels.
From the theatlantic.com
A series of wooden tabernacles contain crudely fashioned ritual objects, skull-like forms, blockish feet.
From the economist.com
The Chapel is surrounded on three sides by large tabernacles which form part of the external butresses.
From the en.wikipedia.org
Candles and, in some cases, tabernacles were reintroduced.
From the en.wikipedia.org
To help us become closer to her Son and become like sparkling clean tabernacles, more worthy of his coming and presence.
From the nzcatholic.org.nz
The structure is similar in architecture to the smooth ivory Mormon tabernacles seen in Salt Lake City and other cities.
From the chron.com
More examples
  • The Mormon temple
  • (Judaism) a portable sanctuary in which the Jews carried the Ark of the Covenant on their exodus
  • Synagogue: (Judaism) the place of worship for a Jewish congregation
  • The Tabernacle is gospel reggae singer Ryan Mark's second album. It was released in 2008, on the Jamaican label Chosen Records. A video was released for God Have Mi Back.
  • The Tabernacle is a mid-size concert hall, in in the U.S. city of Atlanta, currently managed by concert promoter Live Nation. It has a seating capacity of 2,600 people.
  • The Tabernacle is a historic church building at 829 Holland Road in Scottsville, Kentucky.
  • Any temporary dwelling, a hut, tent, booth; The portable tent used before the construction of the temple, where the shekinah (presence of God) was believed to dwell; transferred to the Jewish Temple at Jerusalem as continuing the functions of the earlier tabernacle; Any portable shrine used in ...
  • A large bracket attached firmly to the deck, to which the foot of the mast is fixed. It has two sides or cheeks and a bolt forming the pivot around which the mast is raised and lowered.
  • (Gr. Artophorion; Sl. Darochranitelnitsa). An elaborate ark or receptacle kept on the Altar Table, in which the Holy Gifts of the Eucharist are preserved for the communion of the sick, or for the Liturgy of the Presanctified Gifts during Lent.