mastabah Antonyms

No Synonyms and anytonyms found

Meaning of mastabah

Wordnet

mastabah (n)

an ancient Egyptian mud-brick tomb with a rectangular base and sloping sides and flat roof

Webster

mastabah ()

In Mohammedan countries, a fixed seat, common in dwellings and in public places.

A type of tomb, of the time of the Memphite dynasties, comprising an oblong structure with sloping sides (sometimes containing a decorated chamber, sometimes of solid masonry), and connected with a mummy chamber in the rock beneath.

mastabah Sentence Examples

  1. The ancient Egyptians constructed mastabahs, rectangular structures with sloping sides, as tombs for commoners.
  2. The mastabah of Ti, an important official during the Fifth Dynasty, is one of the most elaborate examples.
  3. The mastabah's interior typically consisted of a burial chamber and a serdab, a small chamber housing a statue of the deceased.
  4. The mastabah's exterior was often decorated with reliefs depicting scenes from the deceased's life.
  5. The size of a mastabah indicated the status and wealth of the deceased.
  6. Some mastabahs had additional rooms for family and servants to accompany the deceased in the afterlife.
  7. The Step Pyramid of Djoser was essentially a giant mastabah, marking the transition from rectangular tombs to true pyramids.
  8. The Mastaba Project, led by artists Christo and Jeanne-Claude, involved temporarily covering a mastabah in London with bright fabrics.
  9. The design of modern buildings has sometimes been inspired by the ancient Egyptian mastabah.
  10. The mastabah remains a significant architectural element in Egyptian burial culture, representing the transition between life and death.

FAQs About the word mastabah

an ancient Egyptian mud-brick tomb with a rectangular base and sloping sides and flat roofIn Mohammedan countries, a fixed seat, common in dwellings and in publ

No synonyms found.

No antonyms found.

The ancient Egyptians constructed mastabahs, rectangular structures with sloping sides, as tombs for commoners.

The mastabah of Ti, an important official during the Fifth Dynasty, is one of the most elaborate examples.

The mastabah's interior typically consisted of a burial chamber and a serdab, a small chamber housing a statue of the deceased.

The mastabah's exterior was often decorated with reliefs depicting scenes from the deceased's life.