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Word of the Day:
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1. present-day
adjective.
Belonging
to
the
present
time.
Synonyms
current
contemporary
Antonyms
noncurrent
nonmodern
old
Featured Games
2. latter
adjective.
(ˈlætɝ)
Referring
to
the
second
of
two
things
or
persons
mentioned
(or
the
last
one
or
ones
of
several).
Synonyms
last mentioned
Antonyms
former
cardinal
Etymology
latter (English)
lætra (Old English (ca. 450-1100))
3. saint
noun.
(ˈseɪnt)
A
person
who
has
died
and
has
been
declared
a
saint
by
canonization.
Synonyms
deity
divinity
patron saint
immortal
god
sainthood
Antonyms
finite
inferior
deny
desecrate
derestrict
Etymology
saint (English)
saint (Middle English (1100-1500))
saint (Old French (842-ca. 1400))
sanctus (Latin)
4. saint
noun.
(ˈseɪnt)
Person
of
exceptional
holiness.
Synonyms
faquir
fakeer
holy person
Buddha
holy man
good person
fakir
faqir
angel
Antonyms
bad person
liar
bad egg
earthly
mortal
Etymology
saint (English)
saint (Middle English (1100-1500))
saint (Old French (842-ca. 1400))
sanctus (Latin)
5. day
noun.
(ˈdeɪ)
Time
for
Earth
to
make
a
complete
rotation
on
its
axis.
Synonyms
yesterday
unit of time
day of the month
dark
midday
today
mean solar day
twenty-four hour period
24-hour interval
daylight
morrow
twenty-four hours
solar day
hr
high noon
eve
tomorrow
date
twelve noon
daytime
noon
hour
night
noontide
nighttime
60 minutes
noonday
time unit
Antonyms
day
unconcealed
sunrise
past
sunset
Etymology
day (English)
day (Middle English (1100-1500))
dæg (Old English (ca. 450-1100))
6. day
noun.
(ˈdeɪ)
A
day
assigned
to
a
particular
purpose
or
observance.
Synonyms
Patriot's Day
wedding day
Father's Day
Citizenship Day
Lee's Birthday
January 19
Pan American Day
Valentine Day
red-letter day
Victory Day
October 24
degree day
All Fools' day
Robert E Lee's Birthday
Washington's Birthday
Hallowe'en
Mother's Day
washing day
bissextile day
Allhallows Eve
election day
First of May
February 12
anniversary
day of remembrance
St John's Night
civil day
April 14
November 5
leap day
Texas Independence Day
ides
holiday
Lincoln's Birthday
Midsummer Eve
field day
United Nations Day
April Fools'
school day
June 23
Saint Patrick's Day
Cinco de Mayo
December 31
Halloween
Midsummer Night
American Indian Day
Jefferson Davis' Birthday
washday
St Patrick's Day
June 14
polling day
Walpurgis Night
Armed Forces Day
Inauguration Day
saint's day
April Fools' day
St John's Eve
Valentine's Day
Groundhog Day
March 2
Arbor Day
Admission Day
rag day
New Year's Eve
payday
Flag Day
commencement day
March 17
February 29
February 22
Davis' Birthday
February 14
Robert E Lee Day
January 20
May Day
May 1
Saint Valentine's Day
Tet
St Valentine's Day
calendar day
V-day
June 3
September 17
speech day
February 2
market day
Antonyms
overtime
work time
downtime
regulation time
uptime
Etymology
day (English)
day (Middle English (1100-1500))
dæg (Old English (ca. 450-1100))
7. day
noun.
(ˈdeɪ)
Some
point
or
period
in
time.
Synonyms
Judgement Day
Day of Judgment
eschaton
Doomsday
day of reckoning
Judgment Day
time
Last Judgment
crack of doom
Day of Judgement
end of the world
Last Day
doomsday
Last Judgement
off-day
Antonyms
good-natured
white
good
comprehensible
blond
Etymology
day (English)
day (Middle English (1100-1500))
dæg (Old English (ca. 450-1100))
8. day
noun.
(ˈdeɪ)
The
time
after
sunrise
and
before
sunset
while
it
is
light
outside.
Synonyms
evening
time period
morn
mean solar day
twenty-four hour period
eventide
morning
24-hour interval
period of time
daylight
twenty-four hours
solar day
forenoon
midafternoon
period
eve
daytime
even
morning time
afternoon
Antonyms
night
beginning
middle
variability
unevenness
Etymology
day (English)
day (Middle English (1100-1500))
dæg (Old English (ca. 450-1100))
9. day
noun.
(ˈdeɪ)
The
recurring
hours
when
you
are
not
sleeping
(especially
those
when
you
are
working).
Synonyms
work time
workday
working day
Antonyms
time off
enlightenment
enlightened
active
Etymology
day (English)
day (Middle English (1100-1500))
dæg (Old English (ca. 450-1100))
10. day
noun.
(ˈdeɪ)
An
era
of
existence
or
influence.
Synonyms
epoch
era
Antonyms
Patriot's Day
wedding day
Father's Day
Etymology
day (English)
day (Middle English (1100-1500))
dæg (Old English (ca. 450-1100))
Trending Searches 🔥
challenge
creative
negative-impact
aesthetic
white-person
potential
solution
deep-understanding
assistance
pertinacity
for-the-first-time
detect
define
collywobbles
know-it-all
gujarati
help
happy
oppose
technology
atmosphere
mental-health
focus
empathy
invisible
homophobic
impact
center
cohesiveness
more-likely
patriarchal
antonym
support
brainstorm
rhyme
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