Lexicographical Neighbors of Concurrents
Literary usage of Concurrents
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Medii ævi Kalendarium: Or Dates, Charters and Customs of the Middle Ages by Robert Thomas Hampson (1841)
"These supernumerary days are called the Concurrents, because they concur or ...
In the Saxon ka- lendar V. 424, the Concurrents and Dominical Letters are ..."
2. Handy-book of Rules and Tables for Verifying Dates with the Christian Era by John James Bond (1875)
"... Solar Regulars and Concurrents. g^OLAR Regulars are certain fixed numbers
attached to the months of the Julian and Gregorian years. ..."
3. Handy-book of Rules and Tables for Verifying Dates with the Christian Era by John James Bond (1889)
"... Solar Regulars and Concurrents. OLAR Regulars are certain fixed numbers attached
to the months of the Julian and Gregorian years. ..."
4. The Ancient Kalendar of the University of Oxford, from Documents of the by Christopher Wordsworth (1904)
"Durandus thus arranges the ' concurrents ' of a solar cycle of twenty-eight ...
Regulars ' are used with ' Concurrents ' to find on what day of the week the ..."
5. Reminiscences of Glasgow and the West of Scotland by Peter Mackenzie (1865)
"Turner had six or eight strong bodied officers, or concurrents, in their office,
ready for all sorts of business in the civil or criminal line; ..."