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What is the noun for chronicon?

What's the noun for chronicon? Here's the word you're looking for.

chronograph
  1. (obsolete) A chronogram.
  2. A device which marks or records time or time intervals
  3. A combination of watch and stopwatch
  4. Synonyms:
  5. Examples:
    1. “The calibration of these chronoscopes is facilitated by the use of the chronograph.”
      “A chronograph, a countdown timer and dual-time zone readings flesh out its functions.”
      “For example, the Datalink comes with a chronograph, countdown timer, interval timer, multiple alarms and even a notepad.”
chronology
  1. (uncountable) the science of determining the order in which events occurred.
  2. (countable) an arrangement of events into chronological order; called a timeline when involving graphical elements.
  3. Synonyms:
  4. Examples:
    1. “A relatively clear chronology has been established for a significant portion of his oeuvre.”
      “Yet, the present witness chronology is radically different from that accepted prior to 1935.”
      “I think my learned friend has done a chronology which includes them as well.”
chronotaxis
  1. A list or table, sorted in chronological order, of people who held an office. Mostly used for the succession of bishops.
chronicle
  1. A written account of events and when they happened, ordered by time.
  2. Synonyms:
  3. Examples:
    1. “A British historian working in America produced a vast chronicle of the Revolution which argued that its very essence was violence and slaughter.”
chronogeny
  1. (dated, geology, paleontology) The chronology of a thing's origin and development.
chronographer
  1. One who writes a chronography; a chronologer.
  2. Synonyms:
  3. Examples:
    1. “He may be a chronographer, but a very imperfect or rather insipid historian.”
      “His growing reputation led to his appointment as chronographer and cosmographer to Henry, prince of Wales.”
      “Eusebius himself wrote voluminously as apologist, chronographer, historian, exegete, and controversialist, but his vast erudition is not matched by clarity of thought or attractiveness of presentation.”
chronologicity
  1. (rare, nonstandard) The state of being in a chronological order.
chronography
  1. A description or record of past time; history.
  2. Examples:
    1. “The history of chronography and repeating watches can be followed at the Museum «L'Espace Horloger» in Le Sentier and information gathered on current production of luxury watches.”
      “His paper is a compact yet thought-provoking discussion of Eusebius's lists of bishops and their affinity with the tradition of Roman chronography.”
      Chronography enabled people to discover the fractioned images of the American Olympic champion clearing a hurdle at the 1900 Paris Olympics.”
chronologist
  1. A person skilled in chronology.
  2. Synonyms:
  3. Examples:
    1. “That learned noise and dust of the chronologist is wholly to be avoided.”
      “Centuries ago, the Italian scientist and chronologist Lombroso used phrenology to explain and predict criminal behaviour.”
      “It seems that no serious chronologist believed in an old earth.”
chronicler
  1. a person who writes a chronicle
  2. Synonyms:
  3. Examples:
    1. “Bama is not just a writer but also a chronicler and recorder of Dalit life and struggle in Tamil Nadu.”
      “Cute may not yet have its aesthetician, but while it awaits, it does have a chronicler.”
      “She was buried in Mantua in the habit of a Franciscan tertiary, with the cord and the scapular, as the Modenese chronicler Lancellotti reports.”
chronologer
  1. A chronologist.
  2. Synonyms:
  3. Examples:
    1. “One chronologer, the Huguenot scholar Joseph Justus Scaliger, won renown for his reformation of the traditional approach to chronology.”
      “In 1634, by the king's desire, Jonson's salary as chronologer to the city was again paid.”
      “In 1640 Quarles became chronologer to London, virtually abandoning poetry to employ his pen more lucratively.”
chronicling
chronique
  1. (obsolete) A chronicle.
chronicon
  1. chronicle
  2. Synonyms:
  3. Examples:
    1. “The Chronicon was composed in the hermeneutic style almost universally adopted by English scholars writing in Latin in the tenth century.”
      “The Chronicon of Thietmar of Merseburg and the Encomium Emmae report Cnut's mother as having been a daughter of Mieszko I of Poland.”
      “Contemporary works such as the Chronicon and the Encomium Emmae, do not mention this.”
chronographers
chronologists
  1. plural of chronologist
  2. Synonyms:
  3. Examples:
    1. “And that, I'll repeat for the chronologists, did not begin in 2003-it began with colonialism and Empire.”
      “Rather, it is an attempt to clarify some issues in Biblical chronology, so that some common ground can be established amongst creationist chronologists.”
chronographies
  1. plural of chronography
chronotaxes
  1. plural of chronotaxis
chroniclings
chronographs
  1. plural of chronograph
  2. Synonyms:
  3. Examples:
    1. “Fairly late in our 50-year cycle, electronics entered our world in the form of relatively inexpensive chronographs and digital powder scales.”
      “Sometimes they were called chronographs but, since this implied a written record of the time, the term was not correct.”
      “The earliest chronographs used vacuum tubes for timing and a thin copper wire to start and stop.”
chronologers
  1. plural of chronologer
  2. Synonyms:
  3. Examples:
    1. “Again and again, chronologers applied the same techniques to the materials they assembled along the tree's trunk and branches.”
      “By dating backward, chronologers could use both computations, showing how they differed.”
      “The raw materials that chronologers deployed, moreover, came from an immense variety of sources.”
chroniclers
  1. plural of chronicler
  2. Synonyms:
  3. Examples:
    1. “The vaticinations of Thomas are cited by various later chroniclers, and had as much credit in England as in Scotland.”
      “Minutely though Hawkwood's military achievements were recorded by the chroniclers, his motivation has always been hard to discern.”
      “Contemporary chroniclers mainly describe her as an adulterer and temptress.”
chronologies
  1. plural of chronology
  2. Synonyms:
  3. Examples:
    1. “We sampled vegetation and developed pitch pine and Virginia pine tree-ring chronologies from the midslope and the mountaintop.”
      “We consulted several chronologies and databases and attempted to deconflict reports and casualty figures.”
      “The wealth of charts, chronologies, and digests of laws and regulations will be useful to activists and interested citizens.”
chronicles
chroniques
  1. plural of chronique
chronicons
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