From Latin breviārium (“summary”) (compare abbreviation), ultimately from brevis (“short”).
breviary (plural breviaries)
- A book containing prayers, hymns, and so on for everyday use at the canonical hours.
2009, Jennifer Worth, Farewell to the East End, Weidenfeld & Nicholson, page 95:Sister took out her breviary and said her evening office.
- (obsolete) A brief statement or summary.
- (personal prayer book): psalter (Catholicism)
a book containing prayers and hymns
- Armenian: ծիսարան (hy) (cisaran)
- Belarusian: брэвія́рый m (brevijáryj)
- Bulgarian: молитвеник m (molitvenik), требник m (trebnik)
- Czech: breviář (cs) m
- Danish: breviar
- Dutch: brevier (nl) n
- Esperanto: breviero
- Finnish: rukouskirja (fi), breviario, hetkirukouskirja
- French: bréviaire (fr) m
- Georgian: კურთხევანი (ḳurtxevani)
- German: Brevier (de) n
- Hungarian: breviárium (hu)
- Italian: breviario (it) m
- Latvian: breviārs (lv)
- Macedonian: тре́бник m (trébnik), бревија́р m (brevijár), ча́сослов m (čásoslov), моли́твеник m (molítvenik), о́бредник m (óbrednik)
- Polish: brewiarz (pl) m
- Portuguese: breviário (pt) m, livro de horas m
- Punjabi: ਗੁਟਕਾ m (guṭkā)
- Romanian: breviar (ro) n
- Russian: тре́бник (ru) m (trébnik), (Catholic) бревиа́рий (ru) m (breviárij)
- Serbo-Croatian:
- Cyrillic: часослов m, молитвеник m
- Roman: časoslov (sh) m, molitvenik (sh) m
- Slovak: breviár (sk) m
- Spanish: breviario (es) m
- Ukrainian: бревіа́рій m (breviárij)
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