Home
3D
Stylish English
Comic Cartoon
Curly
Decorative
Dingbats
Dotted
Famous
Fire
Gothic
Groovy
Handwriting
Headline
more
Horror
Ice Snow
Modern
Outline
Russian
Sci Fi
Script
Valentine
Alien
Animals
Army Stencil
Asian
Bitmap Pixel
Black Letter
Blurred
Brush
Celtic Irish
Chalk Crayon
Christmas
Computer
Disney
Distorted
Easter
Fantasy
Fixed Width
Graffiti
Greek Roman
Halloween
Italic
LCD
Medieval
Mexican
Movies Tv
Old English
Old School
Pointed
Retro
Rock Stone
Rounded
School
Scratched
Serif
Square
Trash
Typewriter
USA
Various
Western
English to English Dictionary ⇛
A
B
C
D
E
F
G
H
I
J
K
L
M
N
O
P
Q
R
S
T
U
V
W
X
Y
Z
Definition of day
Thanks for using this online dictionary, we have been helping millions of people improve their use of the english language with its free online services. English definition of day is as below...
Day (n.)
(Preceded
by the) Some day in
particular,
as some day of
contest,
some
anniversary,
etc..
Lern More About Day
☛ Wiki Definition of Day
☛ Wiki Article of Day
☛ Google Meaning of Day
☛ Google Search for Day
Christmas
::
Christmas
(n.) An
annual
church
festival
(December
25) and in some
States
a legal
holiday,
in
memory
of the birth of
Christ,
often
celebrated
by a
particular
church
service,
and also by
special
gifts,
greetings,
and
hospitality..
Trental
::
Trental
(n.) An
office
and mass for the dead on the
thirtieth
day after death or
burial.
Fair
::
Fair
(superl.)
Not
overcast;
cloudless;
clear;
pleasant;
propitious;
favorable;
-- said of the sky,
weather,
or wind, etc.; as, a fair sky; a fair day..
Ripen
::
Ripen (v. t.) To cause to
mature;
to make ripe; as, the warm days
ripened
the
corn..
Vadimony
::
Vadimony
(n.) A bond or
pledge
for
appearance
before
a judge on a
certain
day.
Mansion
::
Mansion
(n.) The place in the
heavens
occupied
each day by the moon in its
monthly
revolution.
Advent
::
Advent
(n.) The
period
including
the four
Sundays
before
Christmas.
Tenebrae
::
Tenebrae
(n.) The
matins
and lauds for the last three days of Holy Week,
commemorating
the
sufferings
and death of
Christ,
--
usually
sung on the
afternoon
or
evening
of
Wednesday,
Thursday,
and
Friday,
instead
of on the
following
days..
Menology
::
Menology
(n.) A brief
calendar
of the lives of the
saints
for each day in the year, or a
simple
remembrance
of those whose lives are not
written..
Windowpane
::
Windowpane
(n.) A thin,
spotted
American
turbot
(Pleuronectes
maculatus)
remarkable
for its
translucency.
It is not
valued
as a food fish.
Called
also
spotted
turbot,
daylight,
spotted
sand
flounder,
and water
flounder..
Friday
::
Friday
(n.) The sixth day of the week,
following
Thursday
and
preceding
Saturday..
Late
::
Late (a.) Far in the
night,
day, week, or other
particular
period;
as, to lie abed late; to sit up late at
night..
Parousia
::
Parousia
(n.) The last day.
Recall
::
Recall
(v. t.) To call back to mind; to
revive
in
memory;
to
recollect;
to
remember;
as, to
recall
bygone
days..
Annual
::
Annual
(n.) A Mass for a
deceased
person
or for some
special
object,
said daily for a year or on the
anniversary
day..
Whitsunday
::
Whitsunday
(n.) The
seventh
Sunday,
and the
fiftieth
day, after
Easter;
a
festival
of the
church
in
commemoration
of the
descent
of the Holy
Spirit
on the day of
Pentecost;
Pentecost;
-- so
called,
it is said,
because,
in the
primitive
church,
those who had been newly
baptized
appeared
at
church
between
Easter
and
Pentecost
in white
garments..
Bail
::
Bail
(v./t.)
To set free, or
deliver
from
arrest,
or out of
custody,
on the
undertaking
of some other
person
or
persons
that he or they will be
responsible
for the
appearance,
at a
certain
day and
place,
of the
person
bailed..
Black Monday
::
Black
Monday
()
Easter
Monday,
so
called
from the
severity
of that day in 1360, which was so
unusual
that many of
Edward
III.'s
soldiers,
then
before
Paris,
died from the
cold..
Valentine
::
Valentine
(n.) A
letter
containing
professions
of love, or a
missive
of a
sentimental,
comic,
or
burlesque
character,
sent on St.
Valentine's
Day..
Collation
::
Collation
(v. t.) A light
repast
or
luncheon;
as, a cold
collation;
-- first
applied
to the
refreshment
on fast days that
accompanied
the
reading
of the
collation
in
monasteries..
Random Fonts
Most Popular
Privacy Policy
GDPR Policy
Terms & Conditions
Contact Us