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The Collaborative International Dictionary
Feast of Tabernacles

Tabernacle \Tab"er*na*cle\, n. [F., fr. L. tabernaculum, dim. of taberna nut. See Tabern.]

  1. A slightly built or temporary habitation; especially, a tent.

    Dwelling in tabernacles with Isaac and Jacob.
    --Heb. xi. 9.

    Orange trees planted in the ground, and secured in winter with a wooden tabernacle and stoves.
    --Evelyn.

  2. (Jewish Antiq.) A portable structure of wooden framework covered with curtains, which was carried through the wilderness in the Israelitish exodus, as a place of sacrifice and worship.
    --Ex. xxvi.

  3. Hence, the Jewish temple; sometimes, any other place for worship.
    --Acts xv. 16.

  4. Figuratively: The human body, as the temporary abode of the soul.

    Shortly I must put off this my tabernacle.
    --2 Pet. i. 14.

  5. Any small cell, or like place, in which some holy or precious things was deposited or kept. Specifically:

    1. The ornamental receptacle for the pyx, or for the consecrated elements, whether a part of a building or movable.

    2. A niche for the image of a saint, or for any sacred painting or sculpture.

    3. Hence, a work of art of sacred subject, having a partially architectural character, as a solid frame resting on a bracket, or the like.

    4. A tryptich for sacred imagery.

    5. A seat or stall in a choir, with its canopy.

  6. (Naut.) A boxlike step for a mast with the after side open, so that the mast can be lowered to pass under bridges, etc.

    Feast of Tabernacles (Jewish Antiq.), one of the three principal festivals of the Jews, lasting seven days, during which the people dwelt in booths formed of the boughs of trees, in commemoration of the habitation of their ancestors in similar dwellings during their pilgrimage in the wilderness.

    Tabernacle work, rich canopy work like that over the head of niches, used over seats or stalls, or over sepulchral monuments.
    --Oxf. Gloss.

Usage examples of "feast of tabernacles".

But this is not all: they agree in rites, they reckon by moons, they offer their first-fruits, they have a kind of feast of tabernacles, they are said to lay their altars upon twelve stones, their mourning a year, customs of women, with many other things that do not now occur.

It was from this woodland that the people, under Nehemiah's command, gathered their branches of olive, oil trees, myrtle, and palm to make booths when the Feast of Tabernacles was restored after their years of captivity in Babylon (Neh.

Even after a certain rate every day, offering according to the commandment of Moses, on the sabbaths, and on the new moons, and on the solemn feasts, three times in the year, even in the feast of unleavened bread, and in the feast of weeks, and in the feast of tabernacles.

So Jonathan put on the holy garments in the seventh month of the one hundred and sixtieth year, at the feast of tabernacles, and he recruited troops and equipped them with arms in abundance.

One of the names given the plant, 'Jew's Myrtle,' points to its use for service during the Feast of Tabernacles.