different between midday vs gidday
midday
English
Alternative forms
- mid-day
Etymology
From Middle English midday, from Old English middæ? (“midday, noon”), equivalent to mid- +? day. Cognate with Scots midday (“midday”), West Frisian middei (“midday, noon, afternoon”), Dutch middag (“midday, noon, afternoon”), German Mittag (“noon, midday, late morning, early afternoon”), Danish middag (“midday, noon, afternoon”), Norwegian Bokmål middag (“midday, noon, afternoon”), Swedish middag (“midday, noon, afternoon”).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /m?d?de?/
Noun
midday (countable and uncountable, plural middays)
- noon; twelve o'clock during the day
Synonyms
- nones, noontide; see also Thesaurus:midday
Antonyms
- midnight; see also Thesaurus:midnight
Translations
See also
- (times of day) time of day; dawn, morning, noon/midday, afternoon, dusk, evening, night, midnight (Category: en:Times of day)
Anagrams
- mydaid
midday From the web:
- what midday means
- what midday number today
- what midday lottery number
- what midday cash 3
- what midday lottery
- what's midday hours
- what's midday number
- what's midday time
gidday
English
Pronunciation
Interjection
gidday
- (Australia, New Zealand, informal) Alternative form of g’day
gidday From the web:
- what does g'day mean
- what is g day mean
- what does g'day mean in slang
Share
Tweet
+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share
you may also like
- midday vs gidday
- midday vs middy
- palatially vs taxonomy
- palatially vs palatally
- palace vs palatially
- transitionary vs taxonomy
- transitionary vs transitional
- transitional vs nontransitional
- transitional vs rilkean
- transitional vs taxonomy
- transitional vs crux
- transitional vs rotational
- transitional vs interim
- transient vs transitorry
- transient vs transition
- transiently vs transitorily
- transience vs transitory
- transitoriness vs transience
- dissolvent vs taxonomy
- dissolvest vs dissolvent