Decameron

Etymology
Borrowed from, coined from and.

Proper noun

 * 1) A collection of 100 short stories by Italian author, probably begun in 1350 and finished in 1353.

Translations

 * Albanian: Dekameroni
 * Arabic: دِيكَامِيرُون
 * Armenian: Դեկամերոն
 * Basque: Dekamerona
 * Belarusian: Дэкамеро́н
 * Bengali: দেকামেরোন
 * Catalan: Decameró
 * Chinese:
 * Mandarin: 十日談
 * Czech: Dekameron
 * Esperanto: Dekamerono
 * Estonian: Dekameron
 * Finnish: Decamerone
 * French:
 * Georgian: დეკამერონი
 * German: Dekameron
 * Greek: Δεκαήμερο, Δεκαήμερον
 * Hebrew: דֶקָאמֶרוֹן, דֶקָאמֶרוֹנֶה
 * Hungarian:
 * Italian: Decameron, Decamerone
 * Japanese: デカメロン
 * Korean:
 * Latvian: Dekamerons
 * Malayalam: ഡെക്കാമറൺ
 * Norwegian: Dekameronen
 * Persian: دکامرون
 * Polish: Dekameron
 * Portuguese: Decamerão, Decameron
 * Romanian: Decameronul
 * Russian: Декамеро́н
 * Serbo-Croatian:
 * Cyrillic: Декамѐро̄н
 * Roman:
 * Spanish: Decamerón
 * Thai: ตำนานสิบราตรี

Etymology
lit. 'ten days', coined from and.

Proper noun

 * 1)  collection of 100 short stories by Boccaccio