A calendar of the Christian year indicating the dates of fasts and festivals.
Sinônimos
Examples for "ecclesiastical calendar"
Examples for "ecclesiastical calendar"
1According to the ecclesiastical calendar, Carnevale is the period between Epiphany and Lent, the last celebration before the Lenten fast.
2But the firm also forgot to allow for the ecclesiastical calendar, and the stoppage of work on the numberless fete days.
1They form an important feature of church life, and an important date in the church calendar.
2From early times the church calendar has set aside special seasons for prayer focused on vocations and ordination.
3For many members of this globe-spanning flock, the annual celebration is the high point of the church calendar.
4To the credit of the clergy of Brixen, his practical often pithy remarks are published in their church calendar.
5One holiday they observe, partly perforce, partly from choice, though it is not one of the great festivals of the church calendar,-St.Ilya's Day.
6Up until then, the emphasis in the Church calendar of festivals was on mid-summer.
7In the Church calendars, Jan. 13th (following "Twelfth Night"), is still kept as "St.
8Church calendars tend to be devoted to saints, rather than vegetables, with September 29th being assigned to the Archangel Michael.
9After the last hymns are sung, the congregation disperses slowly, many lingering in their seats to peruse their church calendars.
10'And I am not disposed to object to a saint of the English Church Calendar.'
11A LITTLE-known Irish saint is about to be wiped off the church calendars and to lose his place in the history books.
12"The Swindlers' Gazette, of course, or the Church Calendar."
13IN church calendars, today's date is devoted to what must surely be the only saint ever to have a type of firework named after her.