Holy Grail

Etymology
From.

So called because it was traditionally difficult to achieve with the available markup.

Proper noun

 * 1)  An artifact in Arthurian mythology, being the cup used by Christ at the Last Supper and in which some of his blood was caught during the crucifixion.
 * 2)  A web page layout with fixed-width columns to the left and right, and a central area that fills the remaining space.

Translations

 * Breton: Graal, Graal Santel
 * Bulgarian: Свещен Граал
 * Catalan: Sant Greal
 * Chinese:
 * Mandarin:
 * Cornish: Gral
 * Czech: Svatý grál
 * Dutch: Heilige Graal
 * Esperanto: Sankta gralo
 * Finnish: Graalin malja
 * French:, Saint-Graal
 * Middle French: Saint Graal
 * Galician: Graal, Santo Graal
 * German: Heiliger Gral
 * Greek: Άγιο Δισκοπότηρο, Άγιο Ποτήριο
 * Hungarian:
 * Irish: Soitheach Naofa
 * Italian: Santo Graal
 * Japanese:
 * Korean: ^성배(聖杯)
 * Lao: ຈອກສັກສິດ
 * Latin: Gradalis Sanctus
 * Manx: Grail Casherick
 * Middle English: Seint Graal
 * Norwegian: hellige gral
 * Polish: Graal,
 * Portuguese: Santo Graal
 * Russian:
 * Serbo-Croatian:
 * Cyrillic: Свети Грал, Свети Здела
 * Roman: Sveti Gral, Sveti Zdela
 * Spanish: Santo Grial
 * Swedish: den heliga gral
 * Tagalog: Banal na Kopita
 * Thai: จอกศักดิ์สิทธิ์
 * Turkish: Kutsal Kâse, Mukaddes Kâse
 * Welsh: Greal sanctaidd

Noun

 * 1)  Anything that is highly sought-after but attained only through difficult endeavor.

Alternative forms

 * holy grail

Translations

 * Dutch:
 * Finnish: graalin malja
 * Greek: άγιο δισκοπότηρο
 * Italian: Santo Graal
 * Portuguese: santo graal
 * Russian: священный Грааль
 * Spanish: santo grial