| Webster's Online Dictionary |
| Part of Speech | Definition | |
| Verb | 1. Of Calendar.[Websters]. | |
| Verb Past Tense | 1. Past tense conjugation of the verb calendar.[Eve - graph theoretic] | |
| Verb Base (calendar) |
1. Enter into a calendar.[Wordnet]. 2. To enter or write in a calendar; to register.[Websters]. 3. Base verb from the following inflections: calendaring, calendared, calendars, calendarer, calendarers, calendaringly and calendaredly.[Eve - graph theoretic] | |
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Source: Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913), compiled from various sources, under license. |
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Date "Calendared" was first used in popular English literature: sometime before 1828. (references) |
| Part of Speech | Definition | |
| Verb | 1. Of Calendar.[Websters]. | |
| Verb Past Tense | 1. Past tense conjugation of the verb calendar.[Eve - graph theoretic] | |
| Verb Base (calendar) | 1. Enter into a calendar.[Wordnet]. 2. To enter or write in a calendar; to register.[Websters]. 3. Base verb from the following inflections: calendaring, calendared, calendars, calendarer, calendarers, calendaringly and calendaredly.[Eve - graph theoretic] | |
Source: Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913), compiled from various sources, under license. | Top | |
Date "CALENDARED" was first used in popular English literature: sometime before 1828. (references) |
| Domain | Definition | ||
| Aerospace | An orderly arrangement of days, weeks, months, etc. to suit a particular need such as civil life. See Julian Day. (references) | ||
| Business | SBA maintains calendars of events for all SBA Offices - Counseling, training, and attend seminars can be obtain free or at a nominal cost. (references) | ||
| Dream Interpretation | 1: To dream of keeping a calendar, indicates that you will be very orderly and systematic in habits throughout the year. 2: To see a calendar, denotes disappointment in your calculations. Source: Ten Thousand Dreams Interpreted .... | ||
| Law | An agenda or list of business awaiting possible action by the House or Senate. The House has five calendars (the Union Calendar, the House Calendar, the Private Calendar, the Corrections Calendar, and the Calendar of Motions to Discharge Committees). (references) | ||
| Literature | 1: The Revolutionary Calendar was the work of Fabre d'Eglantine and Mons. Romme. 2: The Mohammedan Calendar, used in Mohammedan countries, dates from July 16th, 622, the day of the Hegira. It consists of 12 lunar months (29 days, 12 hours, 44 minutes). A cycle is 30 years. 3: The Julian Calendar, introduced B.C. 46. It fixed the ordinary year to 365 days, with an extra day every fourth year (leap year). This is called "The Old Style." 4: Calendar A Newgate Calendar or "Malefactors' Bloody Register," containing the biography, confessions, dying speeches, etc., of notorious criminals. Began in 1700. 5: The Gregorian Year. A modification of the Julian Calendar, introduced in 1582 by Pope Gregory XIII., and adopted in Great Britain in 1752. This is called "the New Style." 6: Calendar. Source: Brewer's Dictionary. | ||
| Printing | A list of bills, resolutions, or other matters to be considered before committees or on the floor of either House of Congress. (references) | ||
| Space | A system of marking days of the year, usually devised in a way to give each date a fixed place in the cycle of seasons. (references) | ||
| Technology | 1: A record of the order in which bills are to be taken up for consideration. - Committee calendar: A chronological listing that is used by a committee to record bills and resolutions referred to the committee and to indicate the status of matters the committee is considering. Committees sometimes include additional information in their published calendar. See also docket. - Consent calendar: A calendar that is used by Members to speed consideration of measures that are considered non-controversial. Bills are called up for consideration regularly twice a month. - Discharge calendar: The calendar to which motions to discharge are referred when the discharge motion has the required 218 Members' signatures. A motion to discharge a committee is an action to relieve a committee from jurisdiction over a measure before it. This is attempted more often in the House than in the Senate, and is rarely successful. Any Member may file a discharge motion 30 days after a bill is referred to committee. Such a motion requires 218 signatures in the House and is delayed seven days after the signatures have been obtained. On the second and fourth Mondays of each month a signing Member may be recognized to move that the committee be discharged. This seldom-used calendar forces debate on discharge motions on the House floor because a bill or resolution has been bottled up in committee for more than 30 days, and a majority of the House wants to consider that measure. See also Quorum. - House Calendar: A calendar or scheduling for action by the House on which are placed all public bills or joint resolutions not raising revenue or directly or indirectly appropriating money or property. - Private Calendar: A calendar of the Committee of the Whole House on which all bills or joint resolutions of a private character are placed. See also Private law. - Union Calendar: A calendar of the Committee of the Whole House on the State of the Union, on which are placed revenue bills, general appropriation bills, and bills of a public character directly or indirectly appropriating money or property. . (references) | 2: Oracle Portal component that displays the results of a SQL query in calendar format. At least one of the table columns in the query must have the DATE datatype. (references) | 3: A list of the days in a year, usually arranged by month and within each month by week, sometimes indicating the dates of important events such as national and religious holidays. Also, an almanac listing days of the year which are of special significance to a particular culture or political entity. Compare with chronology. See also: calendar year. Also refers to a list of the documents included in an archival collection (rolls, charters, state papers, etc.), usually annotated to indicate the date, contents, and other characteristics of each item. (references) |
Source: compiled by the editor from various references; see credits. | Top | ||
| Expressions | Definition | ||
| 13 moon calendar | The 13 Moon Calendar is based on a simple, natural rhythm of 13 Moons of 28 Days + a Day Out of Time for global celebration of Peace Through Culture. The 13 Moon 28 Day Count sprung up as a measure of natural time in cultures as geographically diverse as the Inca, the Maya, the Ancient Egyptians, the Druids, and the Polynesians. (references) | ||
| 360 day calendar | The 360 day calendar is a method of measuring durations used in financial markets. It is based on the assumption of a 360 day year, consisting of 12 months of 30 days each. To arrive at such a calendar from the standard 365/366 day Gregorian calendar, certain days are skipped. (references) | ||
| 53-week calendar | The 53-week calendar is a variation of the Gregorian calendar that is used (mainly) in government and business for fiscal years, as well as in timekeeping. In this calendar, the year does not necessarily end on a specific day (e.g., January 31 or December 31). The year does, however, end on a day of the week (e.g., the last Friday in December). Therefore, weeks and months of equal length are allowed to exist. A year can have a total of 371 days. (references) | ||
| Advent calendar | An Advent calendar is a symbol of the holy season of Advent, celebrated in December near Christmas, another holiday season. (references) | ||
| Appointment calendar | A book containing a calendar and space to keep a record of appointments. Source: Wordnet 3.0 Copyright © 2006 by Princeton University. All rights reserved. | ||
| Attic calendar | The Attic calendar is the calendar that was in use in ancient Attica, the ancestral territory of the Athenian polis. This article focuses on the 5th and 4th centuries BC, the classical period that produced some of the most significant works of ancient Greek literature. Because of the relative wealth of evidence from Athens, of all the Hellenic calendars it is the best understood. Viewed from the standpoint of the modern Gregorian calendar, this ancient system has many peculiar features. This is a part of its appeal: as a cultural artifact, it opens a window of the mentality of its users. (references) | ||
| Babylonian calendar | The Babylonian calendar was a lunisolar calendar with years consisting of 12 lunar months, each beginning when a new crescent moon was first sighted low on the western horizon at sunset, plus an intercalary month inserted as needed by decree. This system came into use sometime before 2000 BC. (references) | ||
| Bahá'í calendar | The Bahá'í calendar, common to the Bahá'í Faith, is a solar calendar with regular years 365 days long and leap years 366 days long as explained within the Kitáb-i-Aqdas. Years are composed of 19 months of 19 days each, plus an extra period of "Intercalary Days" (4 in regular and 5 in leap years) between the 18th and 19th months (26 February to 1 March). Years in the Bahá'í calendar begin at the vernal equinox (usually March 21 in the Gregorian calendar). Days begin at sunset on the previous solar day and end at sunset of the present solar day. (references) | ||
| Bangla Calendar | The Bangla Calendar is the traditional calendar used in Bangladesh and Bangla (Bengali)-speaking regions of India. The calendar is based on the solar year. New Year's Day falls between 13 April and 15 April. (references) | ||
| Barrels per calendar day | Barrels per calendar day (bc/d or bcd) is a standard petroleum downstream industry measurement of actual refinery throughput, as opposed to designed capacity. BCD is computed by dividing the number of refined barrels of oil processed by the actual number of days the refinery was in operation. Compare to the term Barrels per day (bpd, b/d, or bbl/d), which the standard upstream industry measurement of the production rate of oil fields, pipelines, and transportation. (references) | ||
Source: compiled by the editor from various references; see credits. | Top | ||
| Expressions | Domain | Definition | |
| Accounting Calendar | Aerospace | The calendar that defines your accounting periods and fiscal years in Oracle General Ledger. You define accounting calendars using the Accounting Calendar window. Oracle Financial Analyzer will automatically create a Time dimension using your accounting calendar. (references) | |
| Barrels per calendar day | Chemical Industry | The total amount of oil processed by a single refining unit over a period of time divided by the number of days in that period. Source: European Union. (references) | |
| Bearish call calendar spread | Finance | Bearish calendar spread in which a short-term in-the-money call is bought and a longer-term in-the-money call is sold. Source: European Union. (references) | |
| Bullish calendar spread | Finance | A calendar spread that is established when the underlying asset is some distance below the striking price of the options used. Source: European Union. (references) | |
| Bullish put calendar spread | Finance | Bullish calendar spread in which a short-term in-the-money put is bought and a long-term in-the-money put is sold. Source: European Union. (references) | |
| Calendar API | Computing | Calendar API Calendar Application Programming Interface. Source: The Free On-line Dictionary of Computing.. | |
| Calendar Application Programming Interface | Computing | (CAPI, Calendar API) An API for calendar software. Microsoft has defined a CAPI for their Schedule+ application. (1995-01-11). Source: The Free On-line Dictionary of Computing.. | |
| Calendar block | Industry | Consists of a number of slips of paper each printed with particulars of a separate day of the year and assembled in chronological order in the form of a block from which the separate sli ps are removed daily. Source: European Union. (references) | |
| Calendar call (or calling the docket) | Regulation | CERTIORARI means "To be certified". A writ commanding a court to certify records to a superior Court. When the Supreme Court grants certiorari, that means it has agreed to hear the case. If it denies certiorari, it will not hear the case. (references) | |
| Calendar date | History & Folklore | Date referring to a terrestrial calendar. Source: European Union. (references) | |
Source: compiled by the editor from various references; see credits. | Top | ||