pulpitum
/ (ˈpʊlpɪtəm) /
noun
(in many cathedrals and large churches) a stone screen which divides the nave and the choir, often supporting a gallery or loft
Word Origin for pulpitum
C19: from Latin
pulpitum a platform
Words nearby pulpitum
pulpifaction,
pulping,
pulpit,
pulpiteer,
pulpitis,
pulpitum,
pulpotomy,
pulpwood,
pulpy,
pulpy nucleus,
pulque
Example sentences from the Web for pulpitum
The actors usually spoke in the central part, called logeum, or pulpitum.
The Student's Mythology |Catherine Ann WhiteThis loft was called in Latin the pulpitum, and it must not, as it often has been, be confounded with the pulpit to preach from.
Bell's Cathedrals: The Cathedral Church of Gloucester [2nd ed.] |H. J. L. J. MassIt appears there were two screens, one called the Pulpitum and the other a stone screen supporting the rood-loft.
The Cathedrals of Great Britain |P. H. DitchfieldHow, I shall be asked, can the form of the bookcase or desk (pulpitum) be inferred from this catalogue?
The Care of Books |John Willis Clark