we"ll come at 9 o"clock - translation to English
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we"ll come at 9 o"clock - translation to English

CHRISTIAN HYMN FOR ADVENT AND CHRISTMAS
Oh Come, Oh Come Emmanuel; O Come O Come Emanuel; O come o come emmanuel; O come, O come Immanuel; O Come, O Come Emmanuel; Veni, veni Emmanuel; O come, O come, Emmanuel; O Come, O Come, Emmanuel (Tarja song); Veni, Veni, Emmanuel; Veni, veni, Emmanuel; O come, O come Emmanuel!
  • Text in Daniel, ''Thesaurus Hymnologicus'' (1844)
  • The hymn in the 1861 edition of ''[[Hymns Ancient and Modern]]''

we'll come at 9 o'clock      
θα έρθουμε στις 9.
Θα έρθουμε στις 9.      
We"ll come at 9 o"clock.
hour hand         
  • '12:14' in both analog and digital representations. In the analog clock, the minute hand is on "14" minutes, and the hour hand is moving from "12" to "1" – this indicates a time of 12:14.
  • French decimal clock (with the 24 standard hours included around the outside)
  • 15th-century rotating dial clock face, [[St. Mary's Church, Gdańsk]], Poland
  • A ship's radio room wall clock during the age of [[wireless telegraphy]] showing '10:09' and 36 seconds'. The green and red shaded areas denote 3 minute periods during which radio silence was maintained to facilitate listening for distress calls at 2182 kHz and 500 kHz respectively.
  • A modern quartz clock with a 24-hour face
  • A simple 24 hour clock showing the approximate position of the sun
PART OF A NON-DIGITAL CLOCK THAT DISPLAYS THE TIME
Hour hand; Hands of the clock; Clock-face; Clockface; Clock hands; Watch face; Clock hand; 🕐; 🕧; 🕦; 🕥; 🕤; 🕣; 🕢; 🕡; 🕠; 🕛; 🕚; 🕙; 🕘; 🕗; 🕖; 🕕; 🕔; 🕓; 🕒; 🕑; 🕟; 🕞; 🕝; 🕜; Second hand (clock); Telling time; Tell time; Reading a clock; Reading clock; Clock dial; Minute hand
ωροδείκτης

Definition

grandfather clock
(grandfather clocks)
A grandfather clock is an old-fashioned type of clock in a tall wooden case which stands upright on the floor.
N-COUNT

Wikipedia

O Come, O Come, Emmanuel

"O come, O come, Emmanuel" (Latin: "Veni, veni, Emmanuel") is a Christian hymn for Advent, which is also often published in books of Christmas carols. The text was originally written in Latin. It is a metrical paraphrase of the O Antiphons, a series of plainchant antiphons attached to the Magnificat at Vespers over the final days before Christmas. The hymn has its origins over 1,200 years ago in monastic life in the 8th or 9th century. Seven days before Christmas Eve monasteries would sing the “O antiphons” in anticipation of Christmas Eve when the eighth antiphon, “O Virgo virginum” (“O Virgin of virgins”) would be sung before and after Mary’s canticle, the Magnificat (Luke 1:46b–55). The Latin metrical form of the hymn was composed as early as the 12th century.

The 1851 translation by John Mason Neale from Hymns Ancient and Modern is the most prominent by far in the English-speaking world, but other English translations also exist. Translations into other modern languages (particularly German) are also in widespread use. While the text may be used with many metrical hymn tunes, it was first combined with its most famous tune, often itself called Veni Emmanuel, in the English-language Hymnal Noted in 1851. Later, the same tune was used with versions of "O come, O come, Emmanuel" in other languages, including Latin.