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The artifacts included a bronze crucifix, a silver trowel and a christening spoon, as well as a silver key, a 19th-century Russian icon depicting Jesus on the cross and a silver medal from 1964 showing Christ with open arms, surrounded by Greek letters in a Byzantine-style font.—Andrea Margolis, FOXNews.com, 1 May 2026 Another crucifix, given in replacement by Israel, has been donated to the local parish.—Angus Watson, CNN Money, 24 Apr. 2026 Among the art conservatives found objectionable was artist Andres Serrano’s photograph titled Piss Christ featuring a plastic crucifix in a tawny liquid the artist described as his own urine.—Encyclopedia Britannica, 22 Apr. 2026 Centering each crucifix was an eternal knot representing the strength of the Armenian faith.—Marlise Kast-Myers, Boston Herald, 12 Apr. 2026 See All Example Sentences for crucifix
Word History
Etymology
Middle English, from Late Latin crucifixus the crucified Christ, from crucifixus, past participle of crucifigere to crucify, from Latin cruc-, crux + figere to fasten — more at fix
Middle English crucifix "crucifix," from Latin crucifixus (same meaning), derived from earlier Latin crucifigere "to crucify," from cruc-, crux "cross" and figere "to fasten, fix" — related to cross, crucify, fix