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vigil
[ vij-uhl ]
noun
- wakefulness or watchfulness maintained for any reason during the normal hours for sleeping:
They passed many hours in vigil.
- a watch or a period of watchful attention maintained at night or at other times:
The nurse kept her vigil at the bedside of the dying man.
- a quiet demonstration to support a cause, protest an injustice, honor the dead, etc.:
A candlelight vigil in remembrance of the two fallen officers will be held tonight at sundown.
- Ecclesiastical.
- Sometimes vigils. a nocturnal devotional exercise or service, especially on the eve before a church festival:
The Easter vigil reflects on the holy sacraments as well as the resurrection and ascension of Christ.
- the eve, or day and night, before a church festival, especially an eve that is a fast.
- a period of wakefulness from inability to sleep.
vigil
/ ˈvɪdʒɪl /
noun
- a purposeful watch maintained, esp at night, to guard, observe, pray, etc
- the period of such a watch
- RC Church Church of England the eve of certain major festivals, formerly observed as a night spent in prayer: often marked by fasting and abstinence and a special Mass and divine office
- a period of sleeplessness; insomnia
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of vigil1
Example Sentences
On Saturday, her friends held a candlelit vigil close to the US embassy in Budapest.
The day after the Southport attack, thousands attended a peaceful vigil in the town, but a separate protest later turned violent outside a mosque.
Fans, who held vigils in the star's memory last weekend, have also responded by sending his music back into the charts.
About 150 people gathered for a vigil outside the Old Bailey in central London on Monday after jurors returned their verdict.
About 150 people gathered for a vigil outside the Old Bailey on Monday after jurors returned their verdict.
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