noontide

English

Etymology

From Middle English non-tyde, from Old English nōntīd (noontide), equivalent to noon +‎ tide.

Noun

noontide (plural noontides)

  1. (literary) Midday, noon.
    Synonyms: meridian, nones, sext; see also Thesaurus:midday
    Hypernyms: tide, time
    Coordinate terms: morningtide, eventide, eve, even, forenight; see also Thesaurus:morning, Thesaurus:evening
  2. (figuratively) Climax; high point.
    Synonyms: peak, pinnacle, zenith; see also Thesaurus:apex
    • 1879, F. D. Morice, Pindar, chapter 3, page 28:
      Yet there are noble passages in his later poems: and even the latest have their own peculiar charm of serenity and kindliness,—a tranquil sunset, as it were, succeeding not unmeetly to the fiery splendours of his noontide course.

Translations