wintertide
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English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From Middle English wintertid, wyntertyde, from Old English winter tid (“time”). By surface analysis, winter -tide. Cognate to Dutch wintertijd (“winter time”).
Pronunciation
[edit]- (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /ˈwɪntə(ɹ)taɪd/
- (General American, Canada) IPA(key): /ˈwɪntɚtaɪd/, [ˈwɪɾ̃ɚtaɪd]
Audio (General Australian): (file) - Hyphenation: win‧ter‧tide
Noun
[edit]wintertide (plural wintertides)
- (archaic, literary) wintertime
- 1867 February 16, Algernon C[harles] Swinburne, “Child's Song in Winter”, in Eliakim Littell, editor, Littell's Living Age, volume IV, number 46 (4th series; volume XCII, number 1185, from the beginning), Boston, Mass.: Littell and Gay, →OCLC, page 472:
- Shut out the flower-time, / Sunbeam and shower-time; / Make way for our time, / The winter-tide.
- 1891, Robert S. Littell, editor, Littell's Living Age, volume CLXXXVIII, Boston, Mass.: T. H. Carter & Company, →OCLC, page 194:
- O winter tide, O winter tide, / Thy coming brings us sadness; / Afar are those we hold most dear, / Here men are strange, and skies are drear; […]
- 1936, A[lfred] E[dward] Housman, “Diffugere Nives [translation of Horace, Odes, IV.vii]”, in More Poems, London: Jonathan Cape, →OCLC, V, lines 9–12:
- Thaw follows frost; hard on the heel of spring / Treads summer sure to die, for hard on hers / Comes autumn with his apples scattering; / Then back to wintertide, when nothing stirs.
- 2014 February 6, “Sochi 2014: A Nottingham skater's ice dream”, in Impact: The University of Nottingham's Official Student Magazine[1], archived from the original on 12 February 2014:
- […] Figure Skating was actually the very first winter sport included at the summer Olympic games in London 1908. Its wintertide equivalence was eventually introduced in 1924.
Quotations
[edit]- For more quotations using this term, see Citations:wintertide.
Translations
[edit]wintertime — see wintertime
Categories:
- English terms inherited from Middle English
- English terms derived from Middle English
- English terms inherited from Old English
- English terms derived from Old English
- English terms suffixed with -tide (time)
- English 3-syllable words
- English terms with IPA pronunciation
- English terms with audio pronunciation
- English lemmas
- English nouns
- English countable nouns
- English terms with archaic senses
- English literary terms
- English terms with quotations