yeartime
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English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From year + time. Compare Dutch jaartijd, jaargetijde (“season”), German Jahreszeit (“season, time of year”), Swedish årstid (“season”), English yeartide.
Noun
[edit]yeartime (plural yeartimes)
- A time of the year; a season.
- 1910, Sallie Hoffman Perry, Poems:
- Asters. My dearest blossoms of the yeartime hold Scant eulogy, save wandering children's meed — All scentless [...]
- 1965, Rowland L. Collins, Beowulf:
- [...], till another yeartime came to the yards of men, as still today the weather glory-bright always keeps its seasons.
- 1985, Maureen Duffy, Collected poems:
- Spring that deceive and plugs that won't spark where we made not fierce summer but October soft light lit by flashes I recognize as aurora borealis, a yeartime of loving out of a fled, raw afternoon.
- 2011, Alaya Chadwick, Alaya's Fables: Tales That Transform & Awaken:
- There is a “Water Falls” which spills and trickles depending upon the yeartime one visits its huge boulders.
- A year's time; the space of time equivalent to a year.
- 1953, Jack Clement Badcock, The truants:
- [...] even beetle — these thousands of pads in a yeartime of life — had matted the moss and nettle, [...]
Adjective
[edit]yeartime (comparative more yeartime, superlative most yeartime)