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Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
red-letter day
noun
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ August 17 was a red-letter day because at last the dorado-catching campaign succeeded.
▪ Finally the couple may be celebrating a birthday, a wedding anniversary or some other red-letter day.
▪ It could mean the difference between a red-letter day and an empty basket.
▪ It is also a red-letter day for Bath's Ben Clarke, who makes his debut.
▪ This was a red-letter day indeed.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Red-letter day

Red-letter \Red"-let`ter\ (-l?t`t?r), a. Of or pertaining to a red letter; marked by red letters.

Red-letter day, a day that is fortunate or auspicious; -- so called in allusion to the custom of marking holy days, or saints' days, in the old calendars with red letters.

Wiktionary
red-letter day

n. (form of alternative form red letter day English)

WordNet
red-letter day

n. a memorably happy or noteworthy day

Usage examples of "red-letter day".

The evening was, I sensed: for one thing, Calyxa announced then, at first augustly, that next day, the ninth since the sun's entry into Leo, was the twenty-fifth anniversary of her birth and the twentieth of another red-letter day on the calendar of her life, which she'd tell me about tomorrow.

Today was a red-letter day for him: two helpings for dinner, two helpings for supper.

The arrival of a life probe must be a red-letter day on any species’.

If I had the luck, certain mornings, to give up my seat in the bus or subway to someone who obviously deserved it, to pick up some object an old lady had dropped and return it to her with a smile I knew well, or merely to forfeit my taxi to someone in a greater hurry than I, it was a red-letter day.

The first time he did two complete lengths of the pool submerged was a red-letter day for Harry.

Sam was trying to remember what she'd expected to feel on this red-letter day.

For those who believe in omens this must surely be a red-letter day!

He would willingly have dispensed with the introductions which were forced upon him, but while Mrs Ditchling was cast into housewifely distraction by his visit, because she was afraid he would find the place a bit untidy -- which was her way of describing a scene of such chaos as might be expected to exist in a very small cottage inhabited by seven persons, most of whom were of tender years -- it was obviously considered by the rest of the family to constitute a red-letter day in their lives, Alfie, a young gentleman in velveteen knickers and Fair Isle jersey, going so far as to dash out into the garden at the back of the cottage yelling to his brother Claud to come quick, or else he wouldn't see the detective.