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mid-morning

a. of, relating to, or occurring in the midmorning

Usage examples of "mid-morning".

By mid-morning the ruins of Blagden loomed fireless and bleak in the gray filtered light of the Pit The charred and ragged stump of the oak jutted from the lifeless shale.

The weather remained unnervingly warm, and toward mid-morning, as the pies came out of the oven, the rest of the Elves and their guests carpooled in.

A pair of seagulls scratched the dull mid-morning with their screaming overhead.

By mid-morning they were out of the snowfields, and by midday they were back at the place where they had camped the previous night.

It took until mid-morning just for Nylan to flatten the alloy and the blade, and to hammer-fold the two together once.

The aroma of hundreds of animal bodies basking in the warmth of mid-morning could not be mistaken.

Towards mid-morning Ballistar saw Fell and two of his foresters, Gwyn Dark-eye and Bakris Tooth-gone.

It was mid-morning and the heat haze was rising like fog, shrouding the Bitter Lake and the straight dark line of the Canal, which is the best landmark a low-flying pilot could wish for.

But when Danny and Murdoch made a patrol in mid-morning, before the weather got too rough, they found that the barrier net, which we had replaced the pre- vious evening, had again been cut adrift and badly muti- lated.

Elizabeth joined her mid-morning and worked until eight at night, and with Kelly doubling up on weekends and filling in on their off days, they kept the store covered.

She intended to feed a report to her commander by mid-morning and had several blanks she wanted to fill in first.

Five large swept-delta Sukhoi SuAS-686 spaceplanes were lined up ahead of him, pearl-grey fuselages gleaming in the warm mid-morning sunlight.

Or just the first time she had set eyes on him, arriving home in mid-morning after a long and obviously unpleasant night on the job.

The flyer whirled up into the sun of mid-morning and cut a straight course towards the rock teeth of the range, following the line of flight Dane and Tau had seen that shadow travel.

By the time the sun had risen ten degrees or so the sea-breeze began to waft in and by mid-morning it was blowing a moderate gale from the south-west: the Surprise could have carried full topsails, but Tom Pullings, less given to cracking-on than his Captain, would have had a reef in them.