Yes. Look below,
Kindness
King
Ke$ha
Ok, maybe not Ke$ha......
a honest word that starts with y
A good word for a cheerleader that starts with E is energetic.
Kitchenware
kettle
The word is impede.
Lent
He observed Lent by giving up his biggest vice. The word lent is the past tense of lend. Richard lent me his car last week.
Another word for holy is pious.
Semana Santa.
Lent might mean as sacrifice, but there is no other word or an alternative for Lent.
I think that the word you are looking for would be Triduum. Obviously, you will not find any Holy Week word that ends with a and m.
The French word for slow is " lent".
Hazy or holy.
This is made up of two Greek words: "apokries" and "glendi." The Greek word "apokries" means "farewell to meat" and "glendi" means a festival or carnival. The phrase "apokriatiko glengi" is the term given to the meatfare festival which takes places two weeks before Great Lent begins. In English, the 2nd last week before Great Lent is called "meatfare week" and the last week before Great Lent is called "cheesefare week". Meatfare week is the last week for eating meat, and cheesefare week is the last week for eating dairy products, before the fasting period begins and lasts for around 50 days prior to Easter Day. So the "apokriatiko glendi" is called meatfare week in English, and is the last week for eating meat before Great Lent begins. In Greece, the apokriatiko glendi is very popular and is celebrated with music, dancing and lots of meat-eating before the fasting period starts. In the Eastern Orthodox Church, fasting begins on "Clean Monday" which is 10 March 2008 this year, and ends on Orthodox Easter Sunday, which is on 27 April 2008. During the 50 days of fasting, Orthodox Christians usually abstain from eating all meat and dairy products, especially during the final week of Lent, which is called "Holy Week" or "Passion Week."
The forty days of Lent represent the time Jesus spent in the desert, where according to the Bible he was tempted by Satan. Different churches calculate the forty days differently. The purpose of Lent is the preparation of the believer-through prayer, penitence, almsgiving and self-denial-for the annual commemoration during Holy Week of the death of Jesus, and culminates in Easter, the celebration of the Resurrection of Jesus Christ. This word initially simply meant spring and derives from the Germanic root for long because in the spring the days visibly lengthen.
Yes, the word 'Lent' (upper case L) is a noun, a proper noun, a word for the specific forty day period of sacrifice preceding the holy day of Easter in Christian religions. A proper noun is always capitalized.The word 'lent' (lower case l) is the past participle, past tense of the verb to lend.
The past tense of "lend" is "lent."