Sunday - Named Days

Named Days

  • Black Sunday
  • Bloody Sunday
  • Cold Sunday
  • Easter Sunday represents the resurrection of Christ for many Christians.
  • Gaudete Sunday is the third Sunday of Advent.
  • Gloomy Sunday
  • Good Shepherd Sunday is the fourth Sunday of Easter.
  • Laetare Sunday is the fourth Sunday of Lent.
  • Low Sunday, first Sunday after Easter, is also known as the Octave of Easter, White Sunday, Quasimodo Sunday, Alb Sunday, Antipascha Sunday, and Divine Mercy Sunday.
  • Palm Sunday is the Sunday before Easter.
  • Passion Sunday, formerly denoting the fifth Sunday of Lent; since 1970 the term applies to the following Sunday also known as Palm Sunday.
  • Selection Sunday
  • Septuagesima, Sexagesima and Quinquagesima Sunday are the last three Sundays before Lent. Quinquagesima ("fiftieth"), is the fiftieth day before Easter, reckoning inclusively; but Sexagesima is not the sixtieth day and Septuagesima is not the seventieth but is the sixty-fourth day prior. The use of these terms was abandoned by the Catholic Church in the 1970 calendar reforms (the Sundays before Lent are now simply "Sundays in ordinary time" with no special status). However, their use is still continued in Lutheran tradition: for example, "Septuagesimae".
  • Shavuot is the Jewish Pentecost, or 'Festival of Weeks'. For Karaite Jews it always falls on a Sunday.
  • Stir-up Sunday is the last Sunday before Advent.
  • Super Bowl Sunday
  • Trinity Sunday is the first Sunday after Pentecost.
  • Whitsunday "White Sunday" is the day of Pentecost.

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Famous quotes containing the words named and/or days:

    Hast thou named all the birds without a gun?
    Loved the wood rose, and left it on its stalk?
    At rich men’s tables eaten bread and pulse?
    Unarmed, faced danger with a heart of trust?
    Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803–1882)

    To get through their days, nervous natures such as mine have various “speeds” as do automobiles. There are uphill and difficult day which take an eternity to climb, and downhill days which can be quickly descended.
    Marcel Proust (1871–1922)