How To Use Calendrical In A Sentence
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In response to these needs a calendrical system of considerable complexity was devised.
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Toward the left of the upper horizontal band, just above the second and third from the left of the seven toponyms of the Tepanec Confederacy, traces remain of a calendrical date, either Four or Five Flint Knife.
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A calendrical twist of fate found us celebrating Christmas this year on the middle day of December.
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One of the symbols recalls the ajaw glyph, which is both a calendrical day name and the word for king.
Earliest Mesoamerican Writing?
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At the same time, temporality moves forward in a calendrical inevitability that gets cathected as promise.
Phonemanography: Romantic to Victorian
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An elaborate calendrical system was evolved, not least to identify appropriate days for holding ritual and ceremonial events.
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The traditional linkage of human calendrical microcosms to universal historical macrocosms followed an argument in five stages.
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It was understood that a large percentage of the glyphs on any given Maya monument were dates - dates, moreover, that placed each object within an elaborate and incredibly precise series of calendrical cycles.
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This not only reflects that progresses were made in calendrical techniques during the period, but also reveals the reciprocal relation between the planetary astrology and the calendar.
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After some elaborate prolegomena, the book follows a calendrical sequence, each poem dated and grouped by month so that the events of a hundred years follow a seasonal ebb and flow, not chronology.
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Armesto is stiffer than what I'd love him to be, but his eagle-eye view is great -- a vast terra of long calendrical time seems to get all contained, missing not a single drop, in one punch of his keyboard.
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These works commemorated the lives of early dynasts, marking rituals they performed on the occasion of calendrical period endings.
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The book follows a calendrical sequence, each poem dated and grouped by month, so that the events of a hundred years follow a seasonal ebb and flow, not chronology.
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We normally count the day - the time it takes Earth to rotate once on its axis - as the smallest unit of calendrical time.