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Noon   /nun/   Listen
noun
Noon  n.  
1.
The middle of the day; midday; the time when the sun is in the meridian; twelve o'clock in the daytime.
2.
Hence, the highest point; culmination. "In the very noon of that brilliant life which was destined to be so soon, and so fatally, overshadowed."
High noon, the exact meridian; midday.
Noon of night, midnight. (Poetic)



verb
Noon  v. i.  To take rest and refreshment at noon.



adjective
Noon  adj.  No. See the Note under No. (Obs.)



Noon  adj.  Belonging to midday; occurring at midday; meridional.






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Noon" Quotes from Famous Books



... edge of the olive wood, where a narrow lane divided the olives from a sea of pines. The white main road in the distance was empty, and silent with the digestive silence of Riviera thoroughfares at noon, when all the world, from millionaire to peasant, begins to think of the midday meal. Even motors were at rest, comfortably absorbing petrol and leaving the roads to sleep in peace. Far off among the trees Vanno caught a glimpse of two men picnicking, ...
— The Guests Of Hercules • C. N. Williamson and A. M. Williamson

... having shut all the doors on my side of the mine, I left three open on my companion's side. The men, I thought, would not go to work on that side of the mine for a day or two: but in this I was mistaken; and about noon I was alarmed by the report of a man having been killed in one of the galleries for ...
— Tales & Novels, Vol. 2 • Maria Edgeworth

... lived, while lived every man of the uncounted throng gathered there beneath the noon-time sun that October day, they remembered that moment, the moments that followed. As real life is ever stranger than fiction, so off the stage occur incidents more stirring than at the play. Standing there in the narrow ...
— Where the Trail Divides • Will Lillibridge

... Next day, at noon, Lord Burghley sent word that she was to leave between five and six o'clock that evening, and that the minister would be welcome meantime ...
— The Rise of the Dutch Republic, 1555-1566 • John Lothrop Motley

... Yet before noon of the day following the decree of the regent, which fixed the value of actions upon a descending scale, the news, after a fashion of its own, spread rapidly abroad, and all too swiftly the truth ...
— The Mississippi Bubble • Emerson Hough


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