Dominica in Albis
Latin
Etymology
Ellipsis of Dominica in Albīs dēpōnendīs or dēpositīs, “Sunday for putting away the white things”, i.e. the white robe of baptism traditionally received by those newly baptised at Easter.
Proper noun
Dominica in Albīs f (genitive Dominicae in Albīs); first declension
- (ecclesiastical) White Sunday, the Sunday after Easter
- 1588, Robert Bellarmine, De Baptismo et Confirmatione [On Baptism and Confirmation], book 1, chapter 27:
- Unde etiam in Missa Dominicae in Albis legitur propter neophytos illud ex epistola Petri: Quasi modo geniti infantes lac concupiscite.
- On this account, furthermore, in the mass for White Sunday the following is read for the neophytes from the epistle of Peter: “Yearn for milk like newborn babes.”
Declension
First-declension noun with an indeclinable portion.
Case | Singular | Plural |
---|---|---|
Nominative | Dominica in Albīs | Dominicae in Albīs |
Genitive | Dominicae in Albīs | Dominicārum in Albīs |
Dative | Dominicae in Albīs | Dominicīs in Albīs |
Accusative | Dominicam in Albīs | Dominicās in Albīs |
Ablative | Dominicā in Albīs | Dominicīs in Albīs |
Vocative | Dominica in Albīs | Dominicae in Albīs |
This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.