Search for crossword answers and clues

Answer for the clue "Hottest time of the year ", 9 letters:
midsummer

Alternative clues for the word midsummer

Word definitions for midsummer in dictionaries

Wiktionary Word definitions in Wiktionary
a. Happening in the middle of summer. n. 1 The period around the summer solstice; about 21st June in the northern hemisphere. 2 The first day of summer 3 The middle of summer. 4 Midsummer Day, the English quarter day. 5 A pagan holiday or Wiccan Sabbat

Wikipedia Word definitions in Wikipedia
Midsummer is the middle of summer, the time around the summer solstice . Midsummer may also refer to:

WordNet Word definitions in WordNet
n. June 21, when the sun is at its northernmost point [syn: summer solstice , June 21 ] [ant: winter solstice ]

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary Word definitions in Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
Old English midsumor , from mid + sumor "summer" (see summer (n.1)). Midsummer Day , as an English quarter-day, was June 24. Astronomically June 21, but traditionally reckoned in Europe on the night of June 23-24.

The Collaborative International Dictionary Word definitions in The Collaborative International Dictionary
Midsummer \Mid"sum`mer\, n. [AS. midsumor.] The middle of summer. --Shak. Midsummer daisy (Bot.), the oxeye daisy.

Usage examples of midsummer.

The time of Choosing, when the boys of the town and keep were taken into apprenticeship, was close, and Pug became excited as he said, This Midsummers Day I hope to take the Dukes service under Swordmaster Fannon.

Then they would scramble for the charred brands and bear them home to be charms against fever and lightning and the murrain until the next Midsummer Eve.

Midsummer, custom freed the Renunciate novices for the day itself, and Magda came down to breakfast to hear the women discussing their plans for the holiday.

Even though it is Midsummer Festival, we have sterner business to conduct.

Ah, but she was a beauty, her skin pale as marble, even in summer, her eyes like turkis, yet not cold and blue but warm and enchanting as the midsummer sky.

The windows looked across the Harpoon Inlet whose waters on this midsummer morning were quite unscored by ripples and held immaculate the images of sky and white sand, and of the crimson flowering trees that bloom at this time of year in the Northland of New Zealand.

By midsummer of 1809, John Quincy and Louisa Catherine had departed for Russia, taking with them the most recent addition to their family, two-year-old Charles Francis Adams, while eight-year-old George and five-year-old John remained behind in Quincy.

Even the scrappy little area out front had been sodded and fringed with daffodils for spring, with pulmonaria and bergenia to bloom later, and astilbe waiting in the wings for midsummer.

Loudon, the English commander, did not arrive in New York till well on in midsummer of 1756, and he found far different material from the trained bushfighters in the hands of Montcalm.

I awoke in camp that morning to find the highway to Boulder gone, the sky empty of contrails, and the aspen leaves a bright autumn gold despite what should have been a midsummer day, but after bouncing the Jeep across four miles of forest and rocky ridgeline to the back of the Flatirons, it was the sight of the Inland Sea that stopped me cold.

October at the Dachau concentration camp, where he had been incarcerated since midsummer as a Communist sympathizer, he related, he had been summoned to the office of the camp commandant, where he was introduced to two strangers.

By midsummer, the United States government had announced that their research positively confirmed that the cancer-curing drug laetrile was absolutely useless, and by the end of the summer, a similar conclusion was drawn about Mr.

Midsummer flowers cloaked the flanks of the recent barrows two hundred paces to their left in swathes of brittle blue, the hue deepening as the sun sank lower behind the mounds.

He needed five hundred gold bars to begin repaying the church, by no later than midsummer.

Look at me, and look at Saul, and look at Maud, too, hopping from toe to toe in a pink skirt of surprising finery as bracelets tinkle at her wrists on this Midsummer day as we cluster around a shared cigarette by the dustbins between two Doxy Street boarding houses, watching the trams go by as we debate the wild moment for the leap which will take us to the fair in Westminster Great Park.