English
Etymology
Named after Julius Caesar who introduced the calendar in 46 BCE.
Proper noun
the Julian calendar
- The calendar which was used in the western world before the present-day Gregorian calendar. The Julian calendar differed in having all multiple-of-4 years as leap years.
Translations
calendar
- Arabic: التقويم الشرقي m (at-taqwīm aš-šarqī)
- Bulgarian: юлиа́нски календа́р (juliánski kalendár)
- Catalan: calendari julià m
- Chinese:
- Cantonese: 儒略曆 / 儒略历 (jyu4 loek6 lik6), 朱利安曆 / 朱利安历 (zyu1 lei5 on1 lik6)
- Mandarin: 儒略曆 / 儒略历 (zh) (Rúlüèlì), 朱理安曆 / 朱理安历 (Zhūlǐ'ānlì), 朱利安曆 / 朱利安历 (Zhūlì'ānlì)
- Czech: juliánský kalendář m
- Finnish: juliaaninen kalenteri
- French: calendrier julien (fr) m
- Galician: calendario Xuliano m, calendario xuliano (gl) m
- German: Julianischer Kalender m
- Greek: Ιουλιανό ημερολόγιο n (Ioulianó imerológio)
- Hungarian: julián naptár
- Irish: féilire Iúil m
- Macedonian: јулија́нски ка́лендар m (julijánski kálendar)
- Polish: kalendarz juliański (pl) m
- Portuguese: Calendário Juliano m
- Romanian: calendar iulian (ro) n
- Russian: Юлиа́нский календа́рь m (Juliánskij kalendárʹ)
- Spanish: calendario juliano (es) m
- Swedish: julianska kalendern (sv) c, gamla stilen c
- Ukrainian: юліа́нський календа́р (uk) m (juliánsʹkyj kalendár)
- Vietnamese: lịch Juliêng, lịch Julius
- Welsh: calendr Iwlaidd m
|