yearday

Etymology
From, , from (found in plural ), from , equivalent to 🇰🇲. Cognate with 🇨🇬, 🇨🇬, 🇨🇬.

Noun

 * , a day occurring in a yearly cycle, particularly
 * 1)   or  , the anniversary of a person's death, particularly as observed with a requiem mass or other commemoration.
 * 2) * 1998, Plutarch (in translation), Lives of the Noble Grecians and Romans, page 310:
 * For they were the very days on the which the women celebrated the feast and yearday of Adonis' death: and there were also in divers parts of the city, images of dead men carried to burial, and women following them, mourning and lamenting.
 * 1) A particular day numbered from the first day in the year, without regard to month divisions.
 * For they were the very days on the which the women celebrated the feast and yearday of Adonis' death: and there were also in divers parts of the city, images of dead men carried to burial, and women following them, mourning and lamenting.
 * 1) A particular day numbered from the first day in the year, without regard to month divisions.
 * 1) A particular day numbered from the first day in the year, without regard to month divisions.