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Showing results for penetralia.
Definitions

penetralia

[pen-i-trey-lee-uh] / ˌpɛn ɪˈtreɪ li ə /




Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

Like Kahn’s buildings, too, Lesser’s book has its penetralia, core elements to which one is only gradually led.

From New York Times • Mar. 7, 2017

The book is littered with show-off phrases such as "alembicated piety" and "the penetralia of one's self-regard."

From Time Magazine Archive

The King does not live in inaccessible penetralia, and the man of the people when he comes across the man to whom he invariably refers as sua maest� will speak his mind to him.

From Rome by Malleson, Hope

This name was given to a certain class of household deities, which were worshipped by the Romans in the penetralia, or innermost part of their dwellings.

From The Student's Mythology A Compendium of Greek, Roman, Egyptian, Assyrian, Persian, Hindoo, Chinese, Thibetian, Scandinavian, Celtic, Aztec, and Peruvian Mythologies by White, Catherine Ann

My legation button carried me through the guard, and I found an excellent place under a cardinal's wing, in the penetralia within the railing of the altar.

From Pencillings by the Way Written During Some Years of Residence and Travel in Europe by Willis, N. Parker