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To: the OlLine Rebel
Is that true? I just took In memoriam to be one of several phrases used to show respect to the dead--I didn't think it meant that the dead person is not actually buried at this spot. Obviously it is also used in other situations, such as an association listing the names of recently deceased members in a magazine.
35 posted on 01/17/2009 8:35:13 AM PST by Verginius Rufus
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To: Verginius Rufus

I’m a graveyard fanatic so I’ve been around these things quite alot.

But, then again, maybe my memory fails me (I haven’t actually been able to hunt graveyards in a long time, and my graveyard group doesn’t talk about fun things like that, only legislation and getting people to respect graves). Maybe I’ll ask the other people in my group which it is - “in memoriam” or “in memory of”...Actually, I think it is the latter. Sorry if I messed this up.

Whichever phrase it is, you’d see it only sometimes, and for some of those, it’d be obvious the person was “missing”. Once I ran across quite a monument in a graveyard in CT (I hunted all over there) where it told the story of how the son and a friend went out to CA, got on a ship and were shipwrecked. They raised the monument in that burial ground “in memory of” (yes, I think that is the phrase), knowing they were lost at sea.


37 posted on 01/17/2009 11:20:14 AM PST by the OlLine Rebel (Common sense is an uncommon virtue./Technological progress cannot be legislated.)
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