Old Testament readings use the Septuagint , the Scripture the apostles quoted. Masoretic numbering shown for reference.Learn why

grave

a final syllable, is a grove.

grave

verb transitive

[Gr. to write; originally all writing was graving; Eng. to scrape.]

pret. graved; pp. graven or graved.

grave

To carve or cut letters or figures on stone or other hard substance, with a chisel or edged tool; to engrave. Thou shalt take two onyx-stones and grave on them the names of the children of Israel. Exodus 28:9.

grave

To carve; to form or shape by cutting with a chisel; as, to grave an image. Thou shalt not make unto thee any graven image. Exodus 20:4.

grave

To clean a ship’s bottom by burning off filth, grass or other foreign matter, and paying it over with pitch.

grave

To entomb.

grave

verb intransitive
To carve; to write or delineate on hard substances; to practice engraving.

grave

noun
The ditch, pit or excavated place in which a dead human body is deposited; a place for the corpse of a human being; a sepulcher.

grave

Atomb.

grave

Any place where the dead are reposited; a place of great slaughter or mortality. Flanders was formerly the grave of English armies. Russia proved to be the grave of the French army under Bonaparte. The tropical climates are the grave of American seamen and of British soldiers.

grave

Graves, in the plural, sediment of tallow melted. [Not in use or local.,; .

grave

adjective
In music, low; depressed; solemn; opposed to sharp, acute, or high; as a grave tone or sound. Sometimes grave denotes slow.

grave

Solemn; sober; serious; opposed to gay, light or jovial; as a man of a grave deportment; a grave character. Youth on silent wings is flown; . Graver years come rolling on.

grave

Plain; not gay; not showy or tawdry; as a grave suit of clothes.

grave

Being of weight; of a serious character; as a grave writer.

grave

Important; momentous; having a serious and interesting import.