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{{bailly | {{bailly | ||
|btext=ίδος (ἡ) :<br />boîte en buis pour remèdes <i>ou</i> pour diverses | |btext=ίδος (ἡ) :<br />boîte en buis pour remèdes <i>ou</i> pour diverses substances ; vase en forme de boîte (pyxis).<br />'''Étymologie:''' [[πύξος]]. | ||
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{{eles | {{eles | ||
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{{elnl | {{elnl | ||
|elnltext= | |elnltext=πυξίς -ίδος, ἡ [πύξος] potje. | ||
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{{elru | {{elru | ||
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|mdlsjtxt=[[πυξίς]], ίδος, ἡ,<br />a box of box-[[wood]], Luc. | |mdlsjtxt=[[πυξίς]], ίδος, ἡ,<br />a box of box-[[wood]], Luc. | ||
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==Wikipedia EN== | |||
[[File:Italian - Pyx with Arabesques in Quatrofoil Frames - Walters 71314 - View A.jpg|thumb|Pyx with Arabesques in Quatrofoil Frames, ca. 13th century, Walters Art Museum]] | |||
A pyx or pix (Latin: pyxis, transliteration of Greek: πυξίς, boxwood receptacle, from πύξος, box tree) is a small round container used in the Catholic, Old Catholic and Anglican Churches to carry the consecrated host (Eucharist), to the sick or those otherwise unable to come to a church in order to receive Holy Communion. The term can also be used in archaeology and art history to describe small round lidded boxes designed for any purpose from antiquity or the Middle Ages, such as those used to hold coins for the Trial of the Pyx in England. |