• Ambry

    Pronunciation

    • UK IPA: /ˈɑːmbɹi/

    Alternative forms

    Origin

    From Anglo-Norman almarie, aumer, etc., from Old French almarie, from Latin armārium.

    Full definition of ambry

    Noun

    ambry

    (plural ambries)
    1. (now historical, rare) A bookcase; a library or archive. from 13th c.
      • 1485, Sir Thomas Malory, Le Morte Darthur, Book XVII:And all thys was made in grete bookes, and put up in almeryes at Salysbury.
      • 2006, Ernest A Savage, Old English Libraries, p. 97:This collection, then, was the college reference library; corresponding with the common aumbry of the monastery, but also indicative of the principle of all library organisation ....
    2. (obsolete) A storehouse. (Especially a niche or recess in a wall used for storage.)
    3. (now rare) A pantry, or place to store food. from 14th c.
      • 2004, Mary Ellen Snodgrass, Encyclopedia of Kitchen History, p. 128:Used by a wholesaler or retailer as a wine cabinet, the ambry cupboard suited the needs of a neighborhood inn or small-scale private kitchen.
    4. (architecture) A cupboard or storage area in a church to hold books, communion vessels, vestments, etc.; an armarium. from 16th c.
      • 1787, William Hutchinson, The History and Antiquities of the County Palatine of Durham, vol. II, p. 64:At the end of the bench adjoining to the Frater-house door, was a fine almery fixed to the wall, and another on the other side of the door ....
      • 1983, Dennis G Michno, A Priest's Handbook, Morehouse 1998, p. 75:Nothing else should be kept in the tabernacle or aumbry where the Sacrament is reserved, but a small container of water and a cloth may be kept on the shelf for cleansing one's fingers.
      • 2003, Wm. B. Eerdmans, translating Erwin Fahlbusch et al., The Encylopedia of Christianity, vol. III, p. 321:Portions of the consecrated bread from the Eucharist were stored or reserved in an ambry or tabernacle to be taken to the sick.

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