English

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Etymology

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A singularization of dog days.

Noun

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dog day (plural dog days)

  1. One of the dog days of summer: a late-summer day.
    • 1856 July 30, Henry David Thoreau, The Journal of Thoreau, volume 2, page 1:
      This is a perfect dog-day. The atmosphere thick, mildewy, cloudy. It is difficult to dry anything. The sun is obscured, yet we expect no rain.
    • 1946, Carson McCullers, The Member of the Wedding:
      "A terrible terrible dog day storm. Or maybe even a cyclone."
    • 1998, Nina G. Dorsch, Community, Collaboration, and Collegiality in School Reform, page 51:
      August 24, 1993 was the first day of the new school year at Cedar City High School. The day dawned sunny and steamy, promising another "dog day" in southern Ohio.
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COMMUNITY 1
Note 1