graveyard
A graveyard or the place where a corpse and the ashes of the person who died with the graveyard are buried.
As for the words called cemetery meaning a graveyard in English, a dead person comes from words to suggest a place falling asleep of the eternity (an unexploited place) of the Greek that is there.
A graveyard is the place where the ceremony of the funeral last of the deceased is held in West Europe countries.
Such a ceremony or the festivals are considerably different by culture and faith, the denomination.
The graveyard is considerably distinguished from the graveyard in the place except it by the established place; is done.
The graveyard is not usually the thing which is next to a place of the worship that is a church, a chapel directly.
Of course it depends on culture.
For example, the thing called graveyard (a cemetery) to say in English is usually established in churchyard (the courtyard of the church).
I say kirkyaird in the northern part in Scotland and England.
Originally churchyard was a courtyard in front of the church literally, and it was not a thing tied to a cemetery promptly.
As for the words called cemetery meaning a graveyard in English, a dead person comes from words to suggest a place falling asleep of the eternity (an unexploited place) of the Greek that is there.
A graveyard is the place where the ceremony of the funeral last of the deceased is held in West Europe countries.
Such a ceremony or the festivals are considerably different by culture and faith, the denomination.
The graveyard is considerably distinguished from the graveyard in the place except it by the established place; is done.
The graveyard is not usually the thing which is next to a place of the worship that is a church, a chapel directly.
Of course it depends on culture.
For example, the thing called graveyard (a cemetery) to say in English is usually established in churchyard (the courtyard of the church).
I say kirkyaird in the northern part in Scotland and England.
Originally churchyard was a courtyard in front of the church literally, and it was not a thing tied to a cemetery promptly.