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 daytime ['de`taɪm]   添加此单词到默认生词本
n. 白天, 日间

  1. You'd better finish your work in daytime.
    你最好白天把功课做完。
  2. Daytime tasks; daytime clothes.
    日间任务;白天穿的衣服
  3. We can't see stars in the daytime.
    我们不能在白天看到星星。


daytime
[ noun ]
the time after sunrise and before sunset while it is light outside
<noun.time>
the dawn turned night into dayit is easier to make the repairs in the daytime


Day \Day\ (d[=a]), n. [OE. day, dai, dei, AS. d[ae]g; akin to
OS., D., Dan., & Sw. dag, G. tag, Icel. dagr, Goth. dags; cf.
Skr. dah (for dhagh ?) to burn. [root]69. Cf. {Dawn}.]
1. The time of light, or interval between one night and the
next; the time between sunrise and sunset, or from dawn to
darkness; hence, the light; sunshine; -- also called
{daytime}.
[1913 Webster +PJC]

2. The period of the earth's revolution on its axis. --
ordinarily divided into twenty-four hours. It is measured
by the interval between two successive transits of a
celestial body over the same meridian, and takes a
specific name from that of the body. Thus, if this is the
sun, the day (the interval between two successive transits
of the sun's center over the same meridian) is called a
{solar day}; if it is a star, a {sidereal day}; if it is
the moon, a {lunar day}. See {Civil day}, {Sidereal day},
below.

3. Those hours, or the daily recurring period, allotted by
usage or law for work.

4. A specified time or period; time, considered with
reference to the existence or prominence of a person or
thing; age; time.

A man who was great among the Hellenes of his day.
--Jowett
(Thucyd. )

If my debtors do not keep their day, . . .
I must with patience all the terms attend. --Dryden.

5. (Preceded by the) Some day in particular, as some day of
contest, some anniversary, etc.

The field of Agincourt,
Fought on the day of Crispin Crispianus. --Shak.

His name struck fear, his conduct won the day.
--Roscommon.

Note: Day is much used in self-explaining compounds; as,
daybreak, daylight, workday, etc.

{Anniversary day}. See {Anniversary}, n.

{Astronomical day}, a period equal to the mean solar day, but
beginning at noon instead of at midnight, its twenty-four
hours being numbered from 1 to 24; also, the sidereal day,
as that most used by astronomers.

{Born days}. See under {Born}.

{Canicular days}. See {Dog day}.

{Civil day}, the mean solar day, used in the ordinary
reckoning of time, and among most modern nations beginning
at mean midnight; its hours are usually numbered in two
series, each from 1 to 12. This is the period recognized
by courts as constituting a day. The Babylonians and
Hindoos began their day at sunrise, the Athenians and Jews
at sunset, the ancient Egyptians and Romans at midnight.


{Day blindness}. (Med.) See {Nyctalopia}.

{Day by day}, or {Day after day}, daily; every day;
continually; without intermission of a day. See under
{By}. ``Day by day we magnify thee.'' --Book of Common
Prayer.

{Days in bank} (Eng. Law), certain stated days for the return
of writs and the appearance of parties; -- so called
because originally peculiar to the Court of Common Bench,
or Bench (bank) as it was formerly termed. --Burrill.

{Day in court}, a day for the appearance of parties in a
suit.

{Days of devotion} (R. C. Ch.), certain festivals on which
devotion leads the faithful to attend mass. --Shipley.

{Days of grace}. See {Grace}.

{Days of obligation} (R. C. Ch.), festival days when it is
obligatory on the faithful to attend Mass. --Shipley.

{Day owl}, (Zo["o]l.), an owl that flies by day. See {Hawk
owl}.

{Day rule} (Eng. Law), an order of court (now abolished)
allowing a prisoner, under certain circumstances, to go
beyond the prison limits for a single day.

{Day school}, one which the pupils attend only in daytime, in
distinction from a boarding school.

{Day sight}. (Med.) See {Hemeralopia}.

{Day's work} (Naut.), the account or reckoning of a ship's
course for twenty-four hours, from noon to noon.

{From day to day}, as time passes; in the course of time; as,
he improves from day to day.

{Jewish day}, the time between sunset and sunset.

{Mean solar day} (Astron.), the mean or average of all the
apparent solar days of the year.

{One day}, {One of these days}, at an uncertain time, usually
of the future, rarely of the past; sooner or later.
``Well, niece, I hope to see you one day fitted with a
husband.'' --Shak.

{Only from day to day}, without certainty of continuance;
temporarily. --Bacon.

{Sidereal day}, the interval between two successive transits
of the first point of Aries over the same meridian. The
Sidereal day is 23 h. 56 m. 4.09 s. of mean solar time.

{To win the day}, to gain the victory, to be successful. --S.
Butler.

{Week day}, any day of the week except Sunday; a working day.


{Working day}.
(a) A day when work may be legally done, in distinction
from Sundays and legal holidays.
(b) The number of hours, determined by law or custom,
during which a workman, hired at a stated price per
day, must work to be entitled to a day's pay.


daytime \day"time`\ (d[=a]"t[imac]m`), n.
The time during which there is daylight, as distinguished
from the night; same as {day}, 1; as, during the daytime.
[1913 Webster +PJC]

  1. Ms. Bennett is a star of CBS' daytime serial, "The Young and the Restless." CBS had announced the day before that it planned to delay the Sept. 5 start of its fall season because of the strike until at least late October.
  2. The packages aim to pull in United Kingdom tourists during the slow season of April 10 to Dec. 15, when blistering daytime heat and steamy nights drive off winter tourists.
  3. For instance, as more women join the work force, fewer will be home to watch daytime television.
  4. Script writers struck movie and television producers today and the union predicted viewers of talk shows, game shows and daytime soaps would quickly notice a difference in programming.
  5. Actor Taurean Blacque says he sometimes has an eerie feeling that his role as the head of a black family in the new NBC daytime serial "Generations" was lifted right out of his own life.
  6. The report, taped at NBC studios in Burbank, Ca., primarily will concern NBC's struggling daytime schedule, the network said.
  7. The play is about the actors on a TV daytime drama and their off-screen lives, which are as tangled as the plot of their show. The play opened Wednesday at the Orpheum Theater.
  8. The panel recommended that presidents meet with the media twice a month during daytime hours and limit televised evening news conferences to six a year.
  9. It also produces daytime soap operas and the "Wheel of Fortune" and "Jeopardy" game shows.
  10. Gurton said it is fairly unusual to see a meteor in the daytime.
  11. Since "Generations" began in March 1989 with much hoopla and critical acclaim, it has progressed to the bottom of the daytime ratings.
  12. The compensation is a waterfront neighborhood that has an almost suburban feeling, especially evenings and weekends when the daytime workforce is gone.
  13. It urged Palestinians to step up anti-Israeli protests during the last 10 days of the Islamic holy month of Ramadan, which is marked by daytime fasts and feasts at night.
  14. This is more than twice the 5,000 to 6,000 initially expected, but less than 10% of daytime volume.
  15. The research found that people who use extended-wear lenses day and night were 10 to 15 times more likely than strictly daytime users to have eye ulcers.
  16. He sees a commercial on daytime or late-night TV for a lawyer and the rest is history.
  17. He also will head development of a daytime series, the nature of which has not been revealed.
  18. A daytime lull gave the exhausted population a chance to emerge from underground shelters to take stock of damage from the savage shelling of the previous two days.
  19. In easy-to-wear daytime lines, Saint Laurent turned out a soft midnight blue silk chemise dress with big white buttons and several silk shirt waists in jungle-panther prints.
  20. "I'd run the Murfreesboro store in the daytime, and Allen would teach all day and run the store at night," Pasternak said.
  21. His daytime anchoring of TNT's Olympic coverage was crisp and knowledgeable.
  22. Be sure to include your address and a daytime telephone number, along with copies of service receipts and correspondence relating to the repair.
  23. Upfront sales of commercial time in daytime television, for example, are just beginning; prices of daytime commercials fell more than 10% last year because of weak demand, and industry executives report that unit prices in early daytime sales are flat.
  24. Upfront sales of commercial time in daytime television, for example, are just beginning; prices of daytime commercials fell more than 10% last year because of weak demand, and industry executives report that unit prices in early daytime sales are flat.
  25. Upfront sales of commercial time in daytime television, for example, are just beginning; prices of daytime commercials fell more than 10% last year because of weak demand, and industry executives report that unit prices in early daytime sales are flat.
  26. Similarly this television column is devoted once in a while to consideration of such phenomena as game shows, Australian soap operas and the daytime sofa shows.
  27. CNBC's main rival in the daytime is the New York-based Financial News Network, which began in 1981 and says it now is seen in 33.7 million homes and offices in the United States and Canada.
  28. "Wheel of Fortune" letter-turner Vanna White says mystery spells success and has turned down an offer to be host of the daytime version of the show when Pat Sajak leaves.
  29. Since the Moslem month of daytime prayer and fasting, Ramadan, begins in late March and lasts four weeks, the talks could well be delayed until May.
  30. Like other critics, he says AT&T has been trying to cut the discounts it gives to evening, night and weekend callers and then lower rates in the more competitive, business-dominated daytime segment.
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