The Collaborative International Dictionary
Morningtide \Morn"ing*tide`\, n. Morning time. [Poetic]
Usage examples of "morningtide".
Claire reached Morningtide almost two days after that bleak dawn when she had set sail from France.
James was gone, having disappeared after he had seen her walk safely in the door at Morningtide, and without even giving her so much as a chance to charge him with a message for Hugh.
Aside from being clouted over the head, she had not been harmed, and had returned to Morningtide in the aftermath of the kidnapping.
The moors stretched away from the vast stone mansion that was Morningtide in a rolling sea of purple heather.
There would be no tolling of Morningtide Bell here, nor the familiar creaking of floorboards as her fellow students moved around in her old dormitory building preparing for a day of classes.
And in the cold sad light Of the early morningtide, The dear dead girl came back And stood by his bedside.
In the dim unhomely light Of the early morningtide, He took the triple key And he laid it by his side.
Dying embers still glowed in the hearth, awaiting another stirring to life at morningtide, while the stench of stale ale, peat smoke, and sweat seemed to hang close above their heads, held there by the low ceiling.
Maxim rose to his feet and stared for a long, contemplative moment into the growing flames, enjoying the heat as he reflected on the recent information he had gleaned this early morningtide and the plans which the three of them had made.
Synnovea made a mental note to inform Captain Nekrasov on the morningtide that the garment was there, on the chance that he or one of his men had left it behind.