Meaning of triduan | Babel Free
/ˈtɹɪdjʊən/Definitions
-
Lasting three days. not-comparable
-
Happening every third day. not-comparable
Equivalents
Nederlands
driedaags
Examples
“It seems to be a kind of understanding or unwritten compact between the orator and the audience, that he be allowed to talk without interruption as much as he pleases, so long as they are not called upon to listen to one word that he utters. Accordingly, during the delivery of one of these triduan discourses, the Senate of the United States wears the appearance of an orderly well-regulated reading-room; the members being comfortably seated in their arm-chairs, some looking over and answering private letters, some exchanging a few words in a low whisper with each other, or with friends in the strangers' gallery, others reading a newspaper, and all evincing the most philosophic indifference to the tedious harangue and the exhaustless lungs of the orator.”
“These Litanies are also called Rogations, and Gang Days among the Saxons, and Gang Dawes by old English writers. They are triduan, and take place on the three days before Ascension Day.”
“Faenza having escaped their brutality by denying them entrance, its citizens testified their gratitude for the exemption, by instituting an annual triduan thanksgiving, and dotation of two of their daughters.”
“Such tents of assignation are still in use in the pilgrimages of Islam at Mecca, and are known to have been constructed and afterwards burned on the ‘tent-day’ of the triduan festival of Isis at Tithorea in Phocis.”
“To consider one example of his method, the connecting link of his whole argument involves his postulates of biduan and triduan periods and so their relation to the Hewbrew hebdomads.”
“1810 January—June, The Universal Magazine, New Series, Volume XIII, page 103, The diurnal or triduan prints are too expensive for every individual, and in consequence the weekly ones have been established; […] .”
CEFR level
B1
Intermediate
This word is part of the CEFR B1 vocabulary — intermediate level.
This word is part of the CEFR B1 vocabulary — intermediate level.