crema-
(Latin: burn [fire])
2. Etymology: a contraction of cremated + re mains.
2. To burn a dead person's body, sometimes as part of a funeral ceremony.
2. The action of burning or cremating; specifically, the reduction of a corpse to ashes as a way of disposing of it in lieu of interment; an instance of this practice.
The psychic viewpoint regarding cremation
Cremation is the process of using fire to burn the corpse shortly after death to purify the atoms of the physical body from the dross negative thoughts impinged within.
Cremation frees the soul-mind more quickly from the magnetic pull of the bone and cell structure to allow the soul-mind to go about its new tasks in the etheric world (invisible space containing many kinds of life forms and many levels of intelligences, all of which are communicating psychiacally with mankind).
Cremation hastens the reduction of material elements of the physical body to the primal elements again.
2. A person who advocates cremation, or the burning of the dead, instead of the burial of the whole body in the ground.
2. A place or establishment used for cremation; specifically, a mortuary for the incineration or cremation of corpses.
This mortuary is providing people with a choice of having their family members cremated in either the "Smoking" or the "No Smoking" section of the crematory; as if that would make any difference.
Special: Cremation of Sam McGee poem.
Cross references of word groups that are related, directly, indirectly, or partly to: "fire, burn, glow, or ashes": ars-, ard-; -bust; cand-, cend-; caust-, caut-; ciner-; ether-; flagr-; flam-; focus, foci-; fulg-; gehenna-; ign-; phleg-; phlog-; pyreto-, -pyrexia; pyr-; spod- (ashes; waste); volcan-.