• Yearday

    Origin

    From Middle English ȝereday, ȝerdai ("anniversary"), from Old English *ġēardæġ (found in plural ġēardagas ("days of yore"), equivalent to year + day. Cognate with Dutch jaardag ("birthday"), Middle High German jārtac ("anniversary").

    Full definition of yearday

    Noun

    yearday

    (plural yeardays)
    1. A day or time occurring in a yearly cycle; an annual day, season, or event.
      • 1887, Michael Baxter, Forty coming wonders:The Second Advent of Christ to remove to heaven his waiting people takes place at the end of the yearday sixth vial in accordance with his personal announcement, ...
      • 1998, in the Australian Journal of Botany, volume 46:... the amended yearday which was the middle day in flowering range. the yearday which is equivalent to commencement of flowering. the amended yearday (based on flowering yearday) which is the equivalent to the commencement of ...
    2. (mathematics) A day of the year.
      • 1985, Mathematics magazine: Volume 58:To avoid the idiosyncracies of leap years, we propose, as a first approximation to the actual yearday, a standardized yearday s that is a function of ( m, d) only, s = S(m) +dl (6) where 5 is a function of m only.
      • 2000, Agricultural and forest meteorology: Volumes 104-105:... T1
    max the maximum (cloud-free) daily total transmittance at a location with a given elevation and near-surface water-vapor pressure on a given yearday, ...
      • 2002, Journal of physical oceanography: Volume 32:Its power supply failed at yearday 227 (0300), ...
    1. (dated) An annual remembrance day, the anniversary of a death; a day on which prayers are said for the dead.
      • 1907, William Page, The Victoria history of the county of Suffolk, volume 1, page 660:His executors were to keep his yearday for twenty years at the cost of 20s. per year, and finally after his wife's death the bailiffs and commonalty of Southwold were to find a priest for sixteen years next following to sing for his soul ...
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