menologium

Etymology
From, from and , from  + , itself from. .

Noun

 * 1) A calendar of the days of the month or of all the days of the year divided by month, particularly as a table of information divided in this way and
 * 2) * 1976, Robert E.A. Palmer, "A Poem of All Seasons", Phoenix, Vol. 30, No. 2, p. 169:
 * The elder Pliny advises the sowing of certain crops between the Saturnalia (fixed at 17 December) and the Compitalia, which the roughly contemporary menologia indefinitely set in January.
 * , a book detailing the propers and hagiographic canons for the fixed dates of the liturgical year.
 * , a hagiography covering similar material equivalent to a Catholic martyrology.
 * , any monthly list of saints' days or liturgical readings.
 * 1)  A work providing biographies of uncanonized members of a religious order in similar style to a martyrology, frequently read within the order but forbidden for use with the liturgy itself.
 * , a hagiography of Catholic saints.
 * , a stylized date acting as a signature on some documents of the Byzantine Empire.
 * , a stylized date acting as a signature on some documents of the Byzantine Empire.

Synonyms

 * menologion, menology , menologe

Translations

 * French:
 * Greek:
 * Ancient: μηνολόγιον
 * Modern: ,
 * Italian: menologio
 * Latin: menologium, menologio
 * Russian:
 * Spanish: menología

Etymology
From and, from  +  + , from  +. See.

Proper noun

 * 1) menologium,