Old Testament readings use the Septuagint , the Scripture the apostles quoted. Masoretic numbering shown for reference.Learn why
bury
verb transitive
ber'’ry.
bury
noun
ber’ry. This word is a different orthography of burg, burhIt signifies a house, habitation or castle, and is retained in many names of places, as in Shrewsbury, Danbury, Aldermanbury. The word is used by Grew, for burrow.
bury
To deposit a deceased person in the grave; to inter a corpse; to entomb.
bury
To cover with earth, as seed sown.
bury
To hide; to conceal; to overwhelm; to cover with any thing; as, to bury any one in the ruins of a city.
bury
To withdraw or conceal in retirement; as, to bury one’s self in a monastery or in solitude.
bury
To commit to the water; to deposit in the ocean; as dead bodies buried in the deep.
bury
To place one thing within another. Thy name so buried in her.
bury
To forget and forgive; to hide in oblivion; as, to bury an injury. To bury the hatchet, in the striking metaphorical language of American Indians, is to lay aside the instruments of war, forget injuries, and make peace.