epitrachelion

Etymology


Borrowed from, from +. is from (from ) +  +  (from ).

Noun

 * 1)  The liturgical vestment worn by priests and bishops of the Eastern Orthodox Church as the symbol of their priesthood, corresponding to the Western stole.
 * 2) * 1984,, “Thomas the Proclaimer”, in Sailing to Byzantium, San Francisco, Calif.: , ISBN 978-0-88733-008-7 ; republished New York, N.Y.: IBooks, 2000, ISBN 978-0-7434-0718-2 , page 232:
 * [A] little band of marchers displays Greek Orthodox outfits, the rhason and sticharion, the epitrachelion and the epimanikia, the sakkos, the epigonation, the zone, the omophorion; they brandish icons and enkolpia, dikerotikera and dikanikion.

Translations

 * Arabic: بطرشيل
 * Belarusian: епітрахі́ль
 * Czech: epitrachelion
 * Dutch: epitrachelion
 * Finnish: epitrakiili
 * French: épitrachelion
 * Georgian: ოლარი
 * German: Epitrachelion
 * Greek:
 * Ancient: ἐπιτραχήλιον
 * Indonesian: epitrachelion
 * Japanese: エピタラヒリ
 * Macedonian: епитра́фил
 * Polish: epitrachelion
 * Romanian: ,
 * Russian:
 * Serbo-Croatian:
 * Cyrillic: епитрахиљ
 * Roman:
 * Slovak: epitrachélion
 * Spanish: epitrachelion
 * Ukrainian: єпітрахи́ль, єпитрахиль