Coffin facts for kids
A coffin (also known as a casket) is a box used to keep dead bodies, either for burial or after cremation.
The word comes ultimately from Greek kophinos, a basket. In English, the word was not used in a funeral sense until the 1500s.
Any box used to bury the dead in is a coffin.
The main distinction between a coffin and a casket is the shape. A casket regularly has 6 – 8 sides while coffins have a rectangular shape.
Images for kids
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A shop window display of coffins at a Polish funeral director's office
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A casket showroom in Billings, Montana depicting split lid coffins
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The side of an Ancient Egyptian sarcophagus
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A Karo coffin in Northern Sumatra
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Coffin of the ancient Egyptian high status priest Khnum-Nakht, from the Tomb of two Brothers at the Deir Rifeh cemetery
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Coffins as an aircraft, a hen, a crab, a cocoa pod in Teshie, Ghana
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A coffin shop in Macau
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A Universal Casket sales kiosk within a U.S. Costco warehouse retail store in California
See also
In Spanish: Féretro para niños