nones

suomi-englanti sanakirja

nones englannista suomeksi

  1. nona

  1. Substantiivi

nones englanniksi

  1. The notional quarter|first-quarter day of a Roman month, occurring on the 7th day of the four original 31-day months (March, May, Quintilis or July, and October) and on the 5th day of all other months.

  2. 10th century, Byrhtferð of Ramsey, ''Enchiridion'' (Ashmolean MS 328), Book I, Chapter ii, Section 22:

  3. Þa monðas þe habbað iiii nonas æfter kalendas... habbað to idus xiii dagas and to ii kalendas eahtatyne.
    : Those months that have 4 nones after the kalends... have 13 days to the ides and eighteen to the second kalends.
  4. 14th century, Trevisa|John Trevisa trans. Bartholomaeus Anglicus's ''De Proprietatibus Rerum'', folio 119:

  5. Þe days|caniculer dayes biginnyth in þe fiftenþe kalendis of august and endiþ in þe nonis of septembris, and so þey ben euene fifty as it is seide þere.
    : The days begin on the fifteenth kalends of August ''i.e.'', July 18th and end on the nones ''i.e.'', 5th of September, and so they are even fifty as it is said there.
  6. {{quote-book|en|year=1679|author=J. Moxon|title=Mathematics made Easie|page=26

  7. 2011, Robert A. Kaster trans. Macrobius, ''Saturnalia'', Book I, Chapter xiii, Section 18:

  8. As for the Nones, it was thought that the multitudes should avoid mass meetings then because after the kings were expelled, the Roman people particularly celebrated what they took to be Tullius|Servius Tullius's birthday: because crowds notoriously thronged all the Nones—it being well-known that Servius was born on the Nones, though the exact month was uncertain—those in charge of the calendar were afraid that if the whole population gathered on a market day it might start to revolt out of yearning for the king, and so they took the precaution of keeping the Nones and market days distinct.
  9. 2011, Robert A. Kaster trans. Macrobius, ''Saturnalia'', Book I, Chapter xiv, Section 8:

  10. May, Quintilis, and October also have their Nones on the seventh, as Pompilius|Numa ordained, because Caesar|Julius changed nothing about them. As for January, Sextilis, and December, they still have their Nones on the fifth, though they began to have thirty-one days after Caesar|Caesar added two days to each, and it is nineteen days from their Ides to the following Kalends, because in adding the two days Caesar|Caesar did not want to insert them before either the Nones or the Ides, lest an unprecedented postponement mar religious observance associated with the Nones or Ides themselves, which have a fixed date.
  11. (quote-book)

  12. (ux)

    (coordinate terms)

  13. The ninth hour after dawn (about 3 pm).

  14. {{quote-text|en|year=1709|author=John Johnson|title=The Clergy-Man's Vade Mecum|section=Pt. II, p. 101

  15. {{quote-text|en|year=1805|author=Robert Southey|title=Madoc|section=Vol. I, xiii, 134

  16. (syn)

    (hyper)

  17. The divine office appointed to the hour.

  18. (alt form): the sixth hour after dawn; midday (12 pm).

  19. (syn of): a meal eaten around noon.

  20. (c.), Langland|William Langland, ''Plowman|The Vision of William Concerning Piers the Plowman'' (Laud MS 581), v. 378:

  21. I... ouer-seye me at my sopere and some tyme at nones.
  22. (alt form): atheists or those without religious affiliation.

  23. (inflection of)

  24. absolutely not; no way

  25. odd (gl)

  26. (ant)