. "Wheatkernels,honeyorsugar" . . "Kollyva"@en . "Koliva"@en . . "Koliva, kollyva,kollyba or Coliv\u0103 (Greek: \u03BA\u03CC\u03BB\u03BB\u03C5\u03B2\u03B1 pronounced [\u02C8koliva]; Serbian: \u043A\u043E\u0459\u0438\u0432\u043E, koljivo; Romanian: coliv\u0103; Bulgarian: \u043A\u043E\u043B\u0438\u0432\u043E, kolivo; Georgian: \u10D9\u10DD\u10DA\u10D8\u10DD, kolio (also interchangeably called \u10D9\u10DD\u10E0\u10D9\u10DD\u10E2\u10D8, korkoti and \u10EC\u10D0\u10DC\u10D3\u10D8\u10DA\u10D8, tsandili); Ukrainian: \u043A\u043E\u043B\u0438\u0432\u043E, kolyvo), is boiled wheat which is used liturgically in the Eastern Orthodox Churches.This ritual food most likely was used even before Christianity since the ingredients used have symbolic value relating to the Greek pantheon, though not to Christian iconography. "@en . . . .