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noon hour

См. также в других словарях:

  • noon — I (New American Roget s College Thesaurus) n. noontime, midday, noonday, lunchtime. See chronometry. II (Roget s IV) n. Syn. noontime, noontide, noonday, midday, twelve noon, high noon, meridian, noon hour; see also time 1 , 2 . III (Roget s 3… …   English dictionary for students

  • noon — noun the bank closes at noon Syn: midday, twelve o clock, twelve hundred hours, twelve noon, high noon, noon hour, noonday; literary noontime, noontide …   Thesaurus of popular words

  • Noon — (n[=oo]n), n. [AS. n[=o]n, orig., the ninth hour, fr. L. nona (sc. hora) the ninth hour, then applied to the church services (called nones) at that hour, the time of which was afterwards changed to noon. See {Nine}, and cf. {Nones}, {Nunchion}.]… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • Noon of night — Noon Noon (n[=oo]n), n. [AS. n[=o]n, orig., the ninth hour, fr. L. nona (sc. hora) the ninth hour, then applied to the church services (called nones) at that hour, the time of which was afterwards changed to noon. See {Nine}, and cf. {Nones},… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • Noon Wine — is a 1937 short novel written by American author Katherine Anne Porter. It was published in 1939 as part of Pale Horse, Pale Rider (ISBN 0 15 170755 3), a collection of three short novels by the author, including the title story and Old Mortality …   Wikipedia

  • noon — [no͞on] n. [ME < OE non, orig., the ninth hour (by the Roman method, reckoning from sunrise: i.e., 3 p.m.) < L nona (hora), ninth (hour) < novem, NINE] 1. twelve o clock in the daytime; midday 2. the highest point or culmination 3. Rare… …   English World dictionary

  • noon — (n.) mid 12c., non midday, 12 o clock p.m., midday meal, from O.E. non 3 o clock p.m., the ninth hour, also the canonical hour of nones, from L. nona hora ninth hour of daylight, by Roman reckoning about 3 p.m., from nona, fem. singular of nonus… …   Etymology dictionary

  • noon — [nu:n] n [U] [: Old English; Origin: non ninth hour from sunrise , from Latin nonus ninth ] 12 o clock in the daytime = ↑midday at/before/by noon ▪ We left home at noon. ▪ He rarely gets up before noon. ▪ We met at 12 noon . →mo …   Dictionary of contemporary English

  • noon — ► NOUN ▪ twelve o clock in the day; midday. ORIGIN from Latin nona hora ninth hour , originally referring to the ninth hour from sunrise, i.e. approximately 3 p.m …   English terms dictionary

  • hour — mid 13c., from O.Fr. hore one twelfth of a day (sunrise to sunset), from L. hora hour, time, season, from Gk. hora any limited time, from PIE *yor a , from root *yer year, season (see YEAR (Cf. year)). Greek hora was a season; the season; in… …   Etymology dictionary

  • Noon — For other uses, see Noon (disambiguation). Midday redirects here. For other uses, see Midday (disambiguation). Noon time redirects here. For the song by Zion I, see Heroes in the City of Dope. Noon (also mid day or noon time) is usually defined… …   Wikipedia

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