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Roman calendar

NOUN
  1. the lunar calendar in use in ancient Rome; replaced by the Julian calendar in 46 BC

How To Use Roman calendar In A Sentence

  • Today's Gregorian calendar derives from the Babylonian, Egyptian, Jewish and Roman calendars.
  • Today's Gregorian calendar derives from the Babylonian, Egyptian, Jewish and Roman calendars.
  • My God, it grieves me greatly that you are not known, that in this savage wilderness all have not been converted to you, that sin has not been driven from it.~from Saints of the Roman Calendar by Enzo Lodi Sts. Isaac Jogues and John de Brebeuf, priests and martyrs and companions, martyrs
  • Too much need not be made of this, and the Roman calendar will suffice for all but the quite rarest occasions.
  • The old Roman calendar of festivals contained a cycle of urban celebrations reaching back to the city's legendary foundation.
  • It is the day we celebrate the sun's rebirth or return, because that day in a year the shortest dates, using the Chinese concept says is refers to the winter festival Roman calendar.
  • The feast of St Barbara is celebrated by the Greek and Roman calendars on 4 December; the 9th-century martyrologies cite 16 December which is the traditional English date for the festival.
  • The first mention of Christmas Day, as far as we know, was in the Roman calendar for the year 354.
  • However, it is with regard to the modern Roman liturgy that we see a matter of probably wider liturgical interest; namely, the suppression of the ancient octave of Pentecost from the modern Roman calendar -- an octave being the extended liturgical celebration of a particular feast for a period of eight days. Two Reforms Associated with Pentecost: The Vigil and the Octave
  • While this is a matter which is fundamentally tied to the need for liturgical study and ecclesial authority, it may do well, particularly as we sit upon the very time itself, to leave off with a practical suggestion for parish priests wishing to recover some sense of the octave, even within the present circumstances of the modern Roman calendar. Two Reforms Associated with Pentecost: The Vigil and the Octave
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