User:Irish Melkite/sandbox

The Ethiopian Catholic Church, formerly know as the Uniat Abyssinian Church and sometimes referred to as the Ge'ez Catholic Church, is a Church sui iuris of metropolitan rank which serves according to the Alexandrian Rite and is in full communion with the Pope of Rome. Historically, it represents a schism from the Ethiopian Tewahado Orthodox Church, its adherents having left the Orthodox church when they entered into that communion with the Bishop of Rome.

Established in 1930, its membership includes inhabitants of Ethiopia and Eritrea.

The Coptic Catholic Church is a Church sui iuris of patriarchal rank which serves according to the Alexandrian Rite and is in full communion with the Pope of Rome. Historically, it represents a schism from the Coptic Orthodox Church, its adherents having left the Orthodox church when they entered into that communion with the Bishop of Rome.

{| class="wikitable" ! Pastors and Administrators of the Parish Community          ||

As described above, multiple eponyms can exist for the same disease. In these instances, each is listed individually (except as described below), followed by an in-line parenthetical entry beginning 'aka' ('also known as') that lists all alternative eponyms. This facilitates use of the list for a reader who knows a particular disease only by one of its eponyms, without the necessity of cross-linking entries.

It sometimes happens that an alternative eponym, if listed separately, would immediately alphabetically precede or succeed another entry for the same disease. There are three conventions that have been applied to these instances:

1. No separate entry appears for the alternative eponym. It is listed only in the parenthetical 'aka' entry (e.g., Aarskog syndrome appears only as a parenthetical entry to Aarskog–Scott syndrome). 2. If eponymous names subsequent to the first are sequenced differently or the eponym is differentiated by another term (e.g., disease versus syndrome), alphabetical sequence dictates which is the linked version versus which is listed as the alternative ((e.g., Abderhalden–Kaufmann–Lignac is the linked entry and Abderhalden–Lignac–Kaufmann is the parenthetical entry). 3. If the number of names included in the eponym varies, the linked entry is the one which includes the most individual surnames (e.g., Alpers–Huttenlocher syndrome is the linked entry for the disease also known as Alpers disease or Alpers syndrome).