tabernacle /ˈtabənakl
/ ▸ noun 1 (in biblical use) a fixed or movable dwelling, typically of light construction. ▪ a tent used as a sanctuary for the Ark of the Covenant by the Israelites during the Exodus and until the building of the Temple.
2 a meeting place for worship used by Nonconformists or Latter-day Saints (Mormons). 3 an ornamented receptacle or cabinet in which a pyx containing the reserved sacrament may be placed in Catholic churches, usually on or above an altar. ▪ archaic a canopied niche or recess in the wall of a church.
4 a partly open socket or double post on a sailing boat's deck into which a mast is fixed, with a pivot near the top so that the mast can be lowered to pass under bridges. – ORIGIN Middle English: via French from Latin tabernaculum ‘tent’, diminutive of taberna ‘hut, tavern’.