calends
71Greek kalends — or calends A metaphorical expression for a time never likely to arrive, inasmuch as the Greeks had no calends …
72ad kalendas Graecas — /ahd kah len dahs grdduy kahs/; Eng. /ad keuh len deuhs gree keuhs/, Latin. at no time; never: from the fact that the Greeks did not reckon dates by calends. [lit., at the Greek calends] …
73ad Calendas Graecas — /ad ka lenˈdäs grīˈkäs/ (Latin) At the Greek calends, ie never, as the Greeks had no calends …
74kal|ends — «KAL uhndz», noun (plural). = calends. (Cf. ↑calends) …
75Bissextile — Bis*sex tile, n. [L. bissextilis annus, fr. bissextus (bis + sextus sixth, fr. sex six) the sixth of the calends of March, or twenty fourth day of February, which was reckoned twice every fourth year, by the intercalation of a day.] Leap year;… …
76Kalends — Kal ends, n. Same as {Calends}. [1913 Webster] …
77calendula — noun Etymology: New Latin, genus name, from Medieval Latin, from Latin calendae calends Date: 1789 any of a small genus (Calendula) of yellow rayed composite herbs of temperate regions …
78kalends — variant of calends …
79calendar — I. noun Etymology: Middle English calender, from Anglo French or Medieval Latin; Anglo French kalender, from Medieval Latin kalendarium, from Latin, moneylender s account book, from kalendae calends Date: 13th century 1. a system for fixing the… …
80Easter — This article is about the Christian Festival. For secular uses, see Easter customs and Ēostre. For other uses, see Easter (disambiguation). Easter Resurrected Jesus and Mary Magdalene, by Antonio da Correggio, 1543 …