ecclesiastical calendar
91Holy Week — noun the week before Easter • Syn: ↑Passion Week • Hypernyms: ↑week, ↑hebdomad • Part Holonyms: ↑church calendar, ↑ecclesiastical calendar …
92Lententide — noun a period of 40 weekdays from Ash Wednesday to Holy Saturday • Syn: ↑Lent • Hypernyms: ↑season • Part Holonyms: ↑church calendar, ↑ecclesiastical calendar • Part Meronyms: ↑ …
93Passion Week — noun the week before Easter • Syn: ↑Holy Week • Hypernyms: ↑week, ↑hebdomad • Part Holonyms: ↑church calendar, ↑ecclesiastical calendar …
94Whitweek — noun Christian holiday; the week beginning on Whitsunday (especially the first 3 days) • Syn: ↑Whitsun, ↑Whitsuntide • Hypernyms: ↑season • Part Holonyms: ↑church calendar, ↑ecclesiastical calendar …
95Veadar — Ve a*dar, n. The thirteenth, or intercalary, month of the Jewish ecclesiastical calendar, which is added about every third year. [1913 Webster] …
96paschal full moon — noun Date: 1892 the 14th day of a lunar month occurring on or next after March 21 according to a fixed set of ecclesiastical calendar rules and without regard to the real moon …
97San Pedro, Los Angeles, California — San Pedro is a beach community within Los Angeles, California, USA. It was annexed in 1909 and is a major seaport of the area. The town has grown from being dominated by the fishing industry to become primarily a working class town within the… …
98Gračanica monastery — Gračanica (Serbian: Манастир Грачаница or Manastir Gračanica , Albanian: Manastiri i Graçanicës ) is a Serbian Orthodox monastery located in Kosovo. [See also: International reaction to the 2008 Kosovo declaration of independence.] It was founded …
99Westminster Presbyterian Church in the United States — (WPCUS) is a small Presbyterian denomination which was constituted in January 2006 in Lansdowne, Pennsylvania. The founding churches separated from their former denominations and came together because of perceived equivocation on central… …
100Laurices — The term laurices refers to the foetus of the rabbit ( Oryctolagus cuniculus ) prepared without evisceration and consumed as a table delicacy. The word is the plural of the Latin word laurex (variant laurix , n. masc., pl. laurices ; [ [LEW] .]… …