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Final Planning Glossary
Don't you find all the burial terms overwhelming when talking to a funeral director? I did! So listed below are helpful terms for you to better understand funeral terms. If you see a term not listed in this glossary and you think it should be, please email it to Click here to email. |
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ALGOR MORTIS
The cooling of the body immediately after death to room temperature
and temporary stiffening of the muscles.
AMBULANCE
An automotive vehicle especially constructed and equipped to
transport injured, sick or incapacitated persons.
APPRENTICE
The name generally applied to an individual learning the embalming
and funeral directing procedure under the supervision of a licensee.
ARRANGEMENT ROOM
A room of the funeral home used to make the necessary funeral
arrangements with the family of the deceased.
ASPIRATE
Process of withdrawing fluids and gases from the abdominal cavity.
BACKGROUND DRAPES
Decorative drapes usually made of velour arranged on a frame and
placed behind the casket used as a background.
BEREAVED
The immediate family of the deceased suffering from grief upon the
death of a loved one.
BURIAL
Placing of a dead body in an underground earth burial interment
BURIAL CERTIFICATE OR PERMIT
A
legal paper issued by the local government authorizing burial. The
permit may authorize earth burial or cremation or removal to a
distant point.
BURIAL GARMENTS
Wearing apparel made especially for the dead.
BURIAL INSURANCE
An insurance policy in which the principal is paid in a funeral
service and merchandise rather than cash.
BURIAL VAULT
A boxlike container for holding a casket for earth burial. The more
substantial vault or a liner is required by most cemeteries to
prevent the collapse of a grave after burial.
CANOPY
A roof like structure that rolls on wheels to be used at gravesite
for shelter during a funeral service.
CASH ADVANCE ITEMS
Goods and services furnished by a third party and paid for by the
funeral director on your behalf.
CASKET COACH - HEARSE
A motor coach designed and used for the conveyance of the
casketed remains from the place the funeral service is conducted to
the cemetery.
Also known as a Funeral Coach or Hearse.
CASKETING
Placing of the body in the casket upon completion of embalming,
dressing and cosmetics.
CASKET RACK
A device which allows caskets to be placed one on top of the
other for display purposes.
CASKET VEIL
A silk or net transparent covering for the casket for the purpose of
keeping flies and other insects from the remains.
CATAFALQUE
A stand upon which the casketed remains rest while instate and
during the funeral service.
CEMETERY
An area of ground set aside for burial or entombment of the
deceased.
CENOTAPH
An empty tomb or monument erected in memory or a person buried elsewhere.
CERTIFIED DEATH CERTIFICATE
A legalized copy of the original certificate, issued upon request by the
local government for the purpose of substantiating various claims by the family
of the deceased such as insurance and other death benefits.
CHAPEL
A large room of the funeral home in which the farewell service is
held.
CHURCH TRUCK
A collapsible catafalque used for funerals.
CLIENTS
Those who employ the services of the funeral director.
COFFIN
A wedge shaped burial case, usually eight-sided.
COLUMBARIUM
A structure of vaults lined with recesses for urns containing
cremated remains.
COMMITTAL SERVICE
The final portion of the funeral service at which time the deceased
is interred or entombed.
CONTAINER
A pressboard or fiberboard box the size of a casket usually used
for immediate or direct cremations, alternative container.
CORONER
A public official and in some cases a constitutional officer whose
duty it is to investigate the case of death if it appears to be from
other than natural causes, or if there was no physician in
attendance for a long time prior to death.
CORTEGE
The funeral procession.
COSMETOLOGY
Utilization of cosmetics to restore life like appearance to the
deceased.
CREMAINS
The remains of a body after
cremation; cremated remains.
CREMATION
A process which reduces the body by heat to small bone fragments.
When the fragments are pulverized, they are reduced to the
consistency of coarse sand or crushed seashells.
CREMATION PERMIT
A certificate issued by local government authorizing cremation of the deceased.
CREMATORY
A building with a furnace called a retort which is used to cremate
human remains.
CRYPT
A vault or room used for keeping
remains.
COT
The stretcher like carrier used to remove deceased persons from the
place of death to the funeral home.
DEATH
Cessation of all vital functions without the capability of
resuscitation.
DEATH CERTIFICATE
A legal paper signed by the attending physician showing the
cause of death and other vital statistical data pertaining to the
deceased.
DEATH NOTICE
That paragraph in the classified section of a newspaper
publicizing the death of a person and giving those details of the
funeral service the survivors wish to have published.
DECEASED
A person whom all physical life has ceased.
DIRECT BURIAL
The body is transferred from the place of death to the funeral
home, placed in a casket and then delivered directly to the burial
site. There is no pub
DIRECT CREMATION
The body is transferred from the place of death to the funeral
home, placed in a container and delivered directly to a crematory.
There is no public viewing.
DISINTER
To remove the remains from the burial place or to dig up.
DISPLAY ROOM
That room in the funeral home in which caskets, Urns, burial
garments and sometimes vaults are displayed.
DISPOSITION
The final resting place for the body or for cremated remains.
Choices include burial of the body in the earth or a mausoleum,
burial, scattering or deposit of cremated remains in an urn for
placement in a niche or taking home, donation of the body to a
research facility, or burial at sea (this is not permitted in the Great
Lakes).
DOOR BADGE
A floral spray placed on the door of a residence wherein death has
occurred.
EARTH BURIAL
Interment of a body in a grave.
EMBALM
The process of sanitizing, disinfecting and temporarily preserving a
dead body by means of circulating preservative and antiseptic
through the veins and arteries.
EMBALMER
One who disinfects or preserves dead human bodies by the injection
or external application of antiseptics, disinfectants or
preservative fluids, prepares human bodies for transportation which
are dead of contagious or infectious diseases, or uses derma surgery
or plastic art for restoring mutilated features.
EMBALMING FLUID
Liquid chemicals used in preserving a dead body.
EMBALMING TABLE
An operating table usually constructed of metal with a porcelain
surface upon which the remains are placed for embalming.
ENTOMBMENT
Placement of the body in a casket above ground in a mausoleum.
ETHICS
The moral code which guides the members of the funeral profession in
proper conduct of their duties and obligations.
EXHUME
To dig up the remains or to remove from the place of burial.
FAMILY CAR
That limousine in the funeral procession set aside for the use of
the immediate family.
FAMILY ROOM
A specially arranged room in the funeral home which affords the
family privacy at the time
FLOWER CAR
A vehicle used for the transportation of flower pieces from the
funeral home to the church and or cemetery.
FLOWER RACKS AND STANDS
Wooden or
metal stands and racks of varying heights used for banking flowers
around the casket.
FINAL RITES
The funeral service.
FIRST CALL
The initial visit of the funeral director to the place of death for
the purpose of removing the deceased and to secure certain
information for which he has immediate need.
FUNERAL COACH
See Casket Coach.
FUNERAL ARRANGEMENTS
Funeral director's conference with the family for the purpose of
completing financial and service details of a funeral.
FUNERAL DIRECTOR
A professional who prepares for the burial or other disposition of
dead human bodies, supervises such burial or disposition, maintains
a funeral establishment for such purposes, counsels with survivors.
Also called a mortician or undertaker.
FUNERAL HOME
A building used for the purpose of embalming, arranging and
conducting funerals.
FUNERAL SERVICE
The profession which deals with the handling of dead human bodies.
The religious or other rites conducted immediately before final
disposition of the dead human body.
FUNERAL SPRAY
A collective mass of cut flowers sent to the residence of the
deceased or to the funeral home as a floral tribute to the deceased.
GRAVE
An excavation in the earth for the purpose of burying the
deceased.
GRAVE LINER
A receptacle made of concrete, metal or wood into which the casket
is placed as an extra precaution in protecting the remains from the
elements. This is required by most cemeteries to prevent the
collapse of a grave after burial. State law, however, usually does
not require a grave liner.
GRAVE (OR MEMORIAL) MARKER
A method of identifying the occupant of a particular grave.
Permanent grave markers are usually of metal or stone which gives
such data as the name of the individual, date and place of birth,
date and place of death.
GRAVESIDE SERVICES
Formal committal services conducted at the cemetery.
HONORARY PALLBEARERS
Friends or members of a religious, social or fraternal organization
who act as an escort or honor guard for the deceased. Honorary
pallbearers do not carry the casket.
HOSPICE
An organization, staffed mainly by volunteers, dedicated to the care
of the terminally ill who choose to die at home.
INQUEST
An official inquiry or examination usually before a jury to
determine the case of death.
IN STATE
The custom of availing the deceased for viewing by relatives and
friends prior to or after the funeral service.
INSTRUMENTS
The varied tools required in the embalming operation.
INTER (to)
To bury a dead body in the earth in a grave or tomb.
INTERMENT
The act of burial.
INURNMENT
The placing of the ashes of one cremated in an urn.
LEAD CAR
The vehicle in which the funeral director and sometimes the
clergyman rides. When the procession is formed, the lead car moves
to the head of it and leads the procession to the church and or
cemetery.
LICENSE
An authorization from the state granting permission to perform
duties which, without such permission would be illegal.
LIMOUSINE
An automobile designed to seat five or more persons behind the
driver's seat.
LOWERING DEVICE
A mechanism used for lowering the casket into the grave. Apparatus
is placed over the open grave which has two or more straps which
support the casket over the opening. Upon release of the mechanism,
the straps unwind from a cylinder and slowly lower the casket into
the grave.
MAUSOLEUM
A public or private building especially designed to receive
entombments. A permanent above ground resting place for the dead.
MARKER
A monument or memorial to mark the place of burial.
MEDICAL EXAMINER
A government official, usually appointed, who has a thorough
medical knowledge and whose function is to perform an autopsy on
bodies dead from violence, suicide, crime, etc., and to investigate
circumstances of death.
MEMORIAL SERVICE
A religious service conducted in memory of the deceased without the
remains being present.
MINISTER'S ROOM
A room in the funeral home set aside for the clergyman wherein he
can robe and make any last minute preparations for the funeral
service.
MORGUE
A place to where bodies found dead are removed and exposed pending
identification by relatives.
MORTICIAN
See funeral director.
MORTUARY
A synonym for funeral home. A building specifically designed and
constructed for caring for the dead.
MORTUARY SCIENCE
That part of the funeral service profession dealing with the
proper preparation of the body for final disposition.
MOURNER
One who is present at the funeral out of affection or respect for
the deceased.
NICHE
A shell-like space in a wall made for the placing of urns containing
cremated remains, or inside a building for this purpose which is
called a columbarium. Urns are placed in these niches as a final
resting place for cremated remains.
OBITUARY
A brief notice of the death of a person, particularly a newspaper
notice, which usually lists the name of the deceased, the age, and a
biographical sketch. Newspapers may or may not charge for publishing
obituaries.
PALLBEARERS
Individuals whose duty is to carry the casket when necessary during
funeral service. Pallbearers in some sections of the country are
hired and in other sections are close friends and relatives of the
deceased.
PLOT
A specific area of ground in a cemetery owned by a family or
individual. A plot usually contains two or more graves.
PREARRANGED FUNERAL
Funeral arrangements completed by an individual prior to his or her
death.
PREARRANGED FUNERAL TRUST
A method by which an individual can pre-pay their funeral
expenses.
PREFUNDING
Same as prearrangement defined above, except that the funding for
the funeral is paid in advance either through a trust or life
insurance.
PRENEED, PREARRANGING or PREPLANNING
Planning a funeral in advance of the death, usually consisting of a
list of your preferences for funeral arrangements.
PREPARATION ROOM
A room in a funeral home designed and equipped for preparing the
deceased for final disposition,
PREPARATION TABLE
An operating table located in the preparation room upon which
the body is placed for embalming and dressing.
PRICE LIST
An itemized list of funeral goods and services.
PROCESSION
The vehicular movement of the funeral from the place where the
funeral service was conducted to the cemetery. May also apply to a
church funeral where the mourners follow the casket as it is brought
into and taken out of the church.
PURGE
A discharge from the deceased through the mouth, nose and ears of
matter from the stomach and intestine caused by improper or
ineffectual embalming, due to putrefaction.
PUTREFACTION
The decomposition of the body upon death which causes discoloration
and the formation of a foul smelling product.
REGISTER
A book made available by the funeral director for recording the
names of people visiting the funeral home to pay their respects to
the deceased. Also has space for entering other data such as name,
dates of birth and death of the deceased, name of the officiating
clergyman, place of interment, time and date of service, list of
floral tributes, etc.
REMAINS
The deceased.
REPOSING ROOM
A room of the funeral home where a body lies in state from the time
it is casketed until the time of the funeral service.
RESTORATIVE ART
Derma surgery - The process of restoring mutilated and distorted
features by employing wax, creams, plaster, etc.
RIGOR MORTIS
Rigidity of the muscles which occurs at death.
SERVICE CAR
Usually a utility vehicle to which tasteful ornamentation may be
added in the form of a metal firm name plate, post lamps, etc. It is
utilized to transport chairs, church trucks, flower stands, shipping
cases, etc.
SLUMBER ROOM
A room equipped with, besides the usual furniture, a bed upon which
the deceased is placed prior to casketing on the day of the funeral.
The body, appropriately dressed, lies in state on the bed.
SPIRITUAL BANQUET
A Roman Catholic practice involving specific prayers, such as Masses
and Rosaries offered by an individual or a group for a definite
purpose.
SURVIVOR
The persons outliving the deceased, particularly the immediate
family.
TRADE EMBALMER
A licensed embalmer who is not employed by one specific funeral
home, but does the embalming for several firms either on a salary or
per case basis.
TRADITIONAL SERVICE
A religious service with the body present usually preceded by
visitation.
TRANSIT PERMIT
A legal paper issued by the local government authorizing removal of
a body to a cemetery for interment. Some cities also require an
additional permit if the deceased is to be cremated.
URN
A container into which cremated remains are placed, or in which
they are kept; may be made of various materials, including wood,
marble or metal.
VAULT
A burial chamber underground or partly so. Also includes
in meaning the outside metal or concrete casket container.
VIGIL
A Roman Catholic religious service held on the eve of the
funeral service.
VISITATION
A scheduled time, during which a body is present in an open or
closed casket, when family and friends pay their respects, usually
in private in a special room within the funeral home. Also referred
to as a "viewing", "calling hours", "family
hour" or "wake."
WAKE
A watch kept over the deceased, sometimes lasting the entire night
preceding the funeral.
For More Information Call Toll Free: 1-800-903-0309 (U.S.A. Only)
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