gravedom
English
Etymology
From grave + -dom.
Noun
gravedom (uncountable)
- The place, home, abode, or world of the dead; death; grave.
- 1883, The Rainbow, a magazine of Christian literature - Page 136:
- Death comes, and its victims go either into the "sea" — watery gravedom, or into Hades, the earthly gravedom.
- 2009, Harry Stephen Keeler, Hazel Goodwin Keeler, The Circus Stealers:
- Whether they figured immediate selection for gravedom, by pointing skeletal finger, was about to commence, or what, I don't know.
- 2010, Robert King, Jehovah Himself Has Become King:
- [...] what purpose could possibly be served by the angels performing a separation of the righteous and the unrighteous when they are to be united in gravedom and then resurrected back to life on earth—or heaven in the case of anointed individuals?
- 1883, The Rainbow, a magazine of Christian literature - Page 136: