midsummer day

/'mid,sʌmə'dei/
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midsummer day

Midsummer Day is celebrated with a bonfire in the village green.

Definition
  1. Noun:
    • A quarter day in England, Wales, and Ireland: Midsummer Day is a fixed date (June 24th) marking one of the four traditional quarter days in the legal and financial calendar of these countries. Historically, it was a day for settling rents and other periodic payments.
Examples of Usage
  • Noun:
    • The lease agreement stipulates that the rent is due on Midsummer Day.
    • In many old English villages, fairs were traditionally held on Midsummer Day.
Advanced Usage
  • "Midsummer Day's Dream": A phrase sometimes used poetically or in titles, alluding to the festive and sometimes dreamlike quality associated with the day, inspired by Shakespeare's .
    • The festival had a magical, Midsummer Day's Dream atmosphere.
Variants and Related Words
  • Midsummer: (noun) The period around the summer solstice, typically late June.
    • They celebrated the midsummer with a bonfire.
  • Quarter day: (noun) Any of the four days marking the quarters of the legal and financial year.
    • Lady Day and Michaelmas are other examples of quarter days.
Synonyms
  • Quarter day: A day marking a quarter of the year for financial settlements.
  • St. John's Day: June 24th, the feast day of St. John the Baptist, which coincides with Midsummer Day.
Related Phrases
  • Midsummer madness: An idiom referring to foolish or irrational behavior, sometimes associated with the heat or festivities of midsummer.
    • Driving across the country on a whim? That's pure midsummer madness!
midsummer day

Midsummer Day is celebrated with a bonfire in the village green.

Noun
  1. a quarter day in England, Wales, and Ireland