ABYSS

Source: 524, 567

ABYSS', noun [Gr. bottomless, from a priv. and bottom, Ion. See Bottom.]1. A bottomless gulf; used also for a deep mass of waters, supposed by some to have encompassed the earth before the flood.Darkness was upon the face of the deep, or abyss as it is in the Septuagint. Genesis 1:2.The word is also used for an immense cavern in the earth, in which God is supposed to have collected all the waters on the third day of the creation. It is used also for hell, Erebus.2. That which is immeasurable; that in which any thing is lost.Thy throne is darkness, in the abyss of light.The abyss of time.3. In antiquity, the temple of Proserpine, so called from the immense treasures it was supposed to contain.4. In heraldry, the center of an escutcheon.He bears azure, a fleur de lis, in abyss

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A‐byss″ (�), n. [[L. abyssus a bottomless gulf, fr. Gr. � bottomless; ἀ priv. + � depth, bottom.]] 1. 1. A bottomless or unfathomed depth, gulf, or chasm; hence, any deep, immeasurable, and, specifically, hell, or the bottomless pit.
Ye powers and spirits of this nethermost abyss. Milton. The throne is darkness, in the abyss of light. Dryden. 2. 2. Infinite time; a vast intellectual or moral depth.
The abysses of metaphysical theology. Macaulay. In unfathomable abysses of disgrace. Burke. 3. 3. (Her.) The center of an escutcheon.
☞ This word, in its leading uses, is associated with the cosmological notions of the Hebrews, having reference to a supposed illimitable mass of waters from which our earth sprung, and beneath whose profound depths the wicked were punished. Encyc. Brit.