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  1. PROCESSION definition: 1. a line of people who are all walking or travelling in the same direction, especially in a formal…. Learn more.

  2. The meaning of PROCESSION is a group of individuals moving along in an orderly often ceremonial way. How to use procession in a sentence.

  3. A procession is a line of people or vehicles moving along in an orderly and often ceremonial way. A very common example is a funeral procession, which is the line of cars or people traveling together to a burial. A parade is another kind of procession. Procession is the noun form of the verb process, meaning to proceed in or as if in a procession.

  4. A procession is a group of people who are walking, riding, or driving in a line as part of a public event.

  5. procession. noun. /prəˈseʃn/. /prəˈseʃn/. [countable, uncountable] a line of people or vehicles that move along slowly, especially as part of a ceremony; the act of moving in this way. a funeral procession. a torchlight procession. The procession made its way down the hill.

  6. A line or group of people moving together in a deliberate way is a procession. You're most likely to see a procession during some kind of ceremony, parade, or festival. A line of cars moving together to a cemetery is a funeral procession, and a bunch of parents pushing babies in strollers in a parade are also a procession.

  7. PROCESSION meaning: 1 : an organized group or line of people or vehicles that move together slowly as part of a ceremony; 2 : a number of people or things that come or happen one after another series + of.

  8. a line of people or vehicles that moves forward slowly as part of a ceremony or public event: a funeral procession.

  9. pro•ces•sion (prə sesh′ ən), n. the act of moving along or proceeding in orderly succession or in a formal and ceremonious manner, as a line of people, animals, vehicles, etc. the line or body of persons or things moving along in such a manner.

  10. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › ProcessionProcession - Wikipedia

    In times of calamity litanies were held, in which the people walked in robes of penitence, fasting, barefooted, and, in later times, frequently dressed in black (litaniae nigrae). The cross was carried at the head of the procession and often the gospel and the relics of the saint were carried.

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