skytime
English
editEtymology
editNoun
editskytime (uncountable)
- The time when a vehicle such as an airplane is in flight.
- 1957, The Georgia Review - Volume 11, page 68:
- Skytime to Lebanon or Israel is twelve minutes, add four more for Jordan.
- 2016, James Barclay, Heart of Granite:
- Be aware: skytime has been granted so all drakes are coming out to play. Go ahead and test the upgrade a little more but don't push yourselves.
- Time that an astronomer has booked for use of a major telescope.
- 1995, Liz Rigbey, Total Eclipse, page 39:
- But it's possible for an astronomer in say, England, or Hawaii, to book skytime here and scrutinize the results from his own laboratory via computer.
- Time as measured by looking at the sky.
- 1914, Adventure - Volume 9, Issues 4-6, page 14:
- Close to midnight part of the horizon was suffused with a pearly glow, and presently, on skytime, the great moon peered above the water, then seemed to bound free, eager to pace along its arching trail, throwing a path of molten silver on an ebon sea.
- 1972, Jerome Francis Anthony Bump, Gerard Manley Hopkins, Poet of Nature - Volume 1, page 210:
- At sunset, which was in a grey bank with moist gold dabs and racks, the whole round of skytime had level clouds naturally lead-colour but the upper parts ruddled, some more, some less rosy.
- 1985, Field - Issues 32-33, page 56:
- Though not the temporal of clocks and watches, he has neither — he is acutely aware of skytime.