They then proceeded to the distribution of the loculi in equal lots, the loculi representing, as it were, the dividend of the company.
The Christians scattered the relics of the first occupants, knocked down their busts, built arcosolia in the three recesses of the Greek cross, and honeycombed with loculi the side walls of the corridor.
Some of the loculiwere closed with tiles, others with pagan inscriptions which the fossores had found by chance in tunnelling their way into the crypt.
The tomb contained one hundred and eighty loculi for cinerary urns, and each of the shareholders was consequently entitled to five.
Rome were interred in the depths of the suburban cemeteries, and their loculi marked with a simple name.
The arcosolia were dismantled, and theloculi violated one by one.
Evidently some places were more desirable than others, and if we remember how columbaria are built, it is not difficult to see which loculi must have been most in demand.
We first enter a chamber with loculi hewn out of the solid rock on each side.
They usually consisted of only one chamber, eight or ten feet square, but were sometimes larger, and contained either kokim or loculi under arcosolia, sometimes both.
A large tomb will contain as many as twelve loculi ranged around it.
Differs from apiculata in its more broadly elliptical shape, the smaller number of its loculiand the angular character of its striation" (Lewis).
The structure, however, is not like that of either, as the loculi are attached to the valve and are not separable as in Mastogloia, and the cell-wall is not like that of any Navicula.
Next to it is a square with six open loculi ranged from north to south.
Several of the horizontal loculi contained the bones of men and beasts: I did not disturb them, as all appeared to be modern.
Over another ruin to the west are graffiti, of which copies from squeezes and photographs are here given: there are two loculi in the southern wall; and in the south-eastern corner is a pit, also sunk for a sarcophagus.
The loculi or cells of the ovarium are none other than closed carpels.
Seed-bearing alæ to the columella are only the carpellar edges prolonged into the loculi or cells.
When the loculi only are filled, the main channel of the colon is undisturbed.
It is undoubtedly a fact that the loculi of the colon contain small faecal accumulations extending over weeks, months, or even years.
In the large intestine the longitudinal fibres are shorter than the tube itself, which length permits the formation of loculi (cavities).
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "loculi" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.