pallium in English

noun
1
a woolen vestment conferred by the pope on an archbishop, consisting of a narrow, circular band placed around the shoulders with short lappets hanging from front and back.
Within a short time of his election, a formal inauguration ceremony takes place, at which the woollen pallium is bestowed upon him.
2
a man's large rectangular cloak, especially as worn by Greek philosophical and religious teachers.
The one figure that remains to be reconsidered within this arrangement of matter in Rubens's painting is the Pan flanked by a pinelike tree and draped with a cloak resembling a Greek pallium .
3
the mantle of a mollusk or brachiopod.
In ray-finned fishes, however, the pallium thickens and everts, so that the initial most dorsal pallial segment comes to lie lateral to the remaining pallium .
4
the outer wall of the mammalian cerebrum, corresponding to the cerebral cortex.
In mammals, the components are incorporated into the thin overlying pallium to form a laminated neocortex.
noun

Use "pallium" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "pallium" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "pallium", or refer to the context using the word "pallium" in the English Dictionary.

1. Electroencephalogram signal is bioelectric behavior from nerve cell in pallium .

2. There are many different opinions concerning the origin of the pallium.

3. No other bishops, even non-metropolitan archbishops or retired metropolitans, are allowed to wear the pallium unless they have special permission.

4. -- Mass, Imposition of the Pallium and Betowel of the Fisherman’s Ring for the Beginning of the Petrine Ministry of the Bishop of Rome, St

5. The ceremonial connected with the preparation of the pallium and its bestowal upon the pope at his coronation, however, suggests some such symbolism.

6. I greet with fraternal esteem the Portuguese-speaking Metropolitan Archbishops who received the pallium yesterday: Archbishop Mauro Aparecido dos Santos of Cascavel; Archbishop Luís Gonzaga Silva Pepeu of Vitória da Conquista; and Archbishop José Francisco Sanches Alves of Évora.

7. Etymology: Middle English, short for Appallen to become pale --(and) Main Entry: 2pall Function: noun Etymology: Middle English, cloak, mantle, from Old English pæll, from Latin pallium Date: 14th century 2 a : a square of linen usually stiffened with cardboard that is used to cover the chalice b (1) : a heavy cloth draped over a coffin (2) : a