definição e significado de dawn | sensagent.com


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Definição e significado de dawn

Definição

dawn (n.)

1.the time period between dawn and noon"I spent the morning running errands"

2.the earliest period"the dawn of civilization" "the morning of the world"

3.the first light of day"we got up before dawn" "they talked until morning"

4.an opening time period"it was the dawn of the Roman Empire"

dawn (v. intr.)

1.become light"It started to dawn, and we had to get up"

2.become clear or enter one's consciousness or emotions"It dawned on him that she had betrayed him" "she was penetrated with sorrow"

3.appear or develop"The age of computers had dawned"

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Merriam Webster

DawnDawn (d�n), v. i. [imp. & p. p. Dawned (d�nd); p. pr. & vb. n. Dawning.] [OE. dawnen, dawen, dagen, daien, AS. dagian to become day, to dawn, fr. dæg day; akin to D. dagen, G. tagen, Icel. daga, Dan. dages, Sw. dagas. See Day. √71.]
1. To begin to grow light in the morning; to grow light; to break, or begin to appear; as, the day dawns; the morning dawns.

In the end of the Sabbath, as it began to dawn toward the first day of the week, came Mary Magdalene . . . to see the sepulcher. Matt. xxviii. 1.

2. To began to give promise; to begin to appear or to expand. “In dawning youth.” Dryden.

When life awakes, and dawns at every line. Pope.

Dawn on our darkness and lend us thine aid. Heber,

DawnDawn, n.
1. The break of day; the first appearance of light in the morning; show of approaching sunrise.

And oft at dawn, deep noon, or falling eve. Thomson.

No sun, no moon, no morn, no noon,
No dawn, no dusk, no proper time of day.
Hood.

2. First opening or expansion; first appearance; beginning; rise. “The dawn of time.” Thomson.

These tender circumstances diffuse a dawn of serenity over the soul. Pope.

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Definiciones (más)

definição - Wikipedia

Sinónimos

Ver também

Locuções

A New Dawn for the Dead • Anvil of Dawn • At Dawn • At Dawn in Rivendell • At the Soundless Dawn • Banquet Before Dawn • Before Dawn • Before the Dawn • Before the Dawn (album) • Between Dark and Dawn • Beyond Dawn • Black Dawn • Black Dawn (film) • Black Dawn (video game) • Blood Dawn • Blue Light 'til Dawn • Break of Dawn • Burning Dawn • By the Dawn's Early Light • Carolyn Dawn Johnson • Centauri Dawn • Concord Dawn (album) • Crack ov Dawn • Crimson Dawn • Dawn (Andrews novel) • Dawn (Current 93 album) • Dawn (album) • Dawn (comics) • Dawn (group) • Dawn (invocation) • Dawn (metal band) • Dawn (novel) • Dawn Acton • Dawn Addams • Dawn Ape • Dawn Atwood • Dawn Bible Students Association • Dawn Black • Dawn Cohen • Dawn Covington • Dawn Dunlap • Dawn Eden • Dawn Escapes • Dawn FM • Dawn Fraser • Dawn Fratangelo • Dawn French • Dawn Group of Newspapers • Dawn Halfaker • Dawn Hope • Dawn Lake • Dawn Lambertsen Kelly • Dawn Lewis • Dawn Marie Johnston • Dawn Marie Psaltis • Dawn Marie Sass • Dawn McDaniel • Dawn Miller • Dawn Mills, Ontario • Dawn Morrell • Dawn Okoro • Dawn Ostroff • Dawn Padmore • Dawn Patrol • Dawn Penn • Dawn Primarolo • Dawn Princess • Dawn Raid All-Stars • Dawn Raid Entertainment • Dawn Richard (model) • Dawn Richard (singer) • Dawn Run • Dawn Sass • Dawn Schafer • Dawn Shadforth • Dawn Silva • Dawn Steel • Dawn Summers • Dawn Swann • Dawn Tinsley • Dawn Undercover • Dawn Whyatt Frith • Dawn Winkler • Dawn Woods • Dawn Xiana Moon • Dawn and Dusk Club • Dawn chorus • Dawn chorus (birds) • Dawn chorus day • Dawn doll • Dawn of Battle • Dawn of Light • Dawn of Mana • Dawn of Possession • Dawn of Relic • Dawn of Victory • Dawn of the Apocalypse • Dawn of the Black Hearts • Dawn of the Conqueror • Dawn of the Day of the Night of the Penguins • Dawn of the Dead • Dawn of the Dead (1978) • Dawn of the Dead (2004) • Dawn of the Dead (disambiguation) • Dawn of the Dickies • Dawn of the Dragons • Dawn of the Replicants • Dawn patrol • Dawn raid • Dawn simulation • Dawn, Missouri • Dawn-Euphemia, Ontario • Dawn-Marie Wesley suicide • Dawn-to-dusk transcontinental flight across the United States • Dead by Dawn • Deadline at Dawn • Decision Before Dawn • Delta Dawn (album) • Digimon World Dawn and Dusk • Disturbance (Concord Dawn album) • Diuturnity's Dawn • Each Dawn I Die • Escape at Dawn • Ever Sense the Dawn • From Dusk till Dawn • Gay By Dawn • Golden Dawn • Golden Dawn (Goldenhorse song) • Golden Dawn (band) • Grey Dawn • Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn • Hold Back the Dawn • Hook Up (Dawn Raid song) • International Dawn Chorus Day • Joy Dawn • Julie Dawn Cole • Just Before Dawn • Killers of the Dawn • Laura Dawn • Lindsey Dawn McKensie • MS Dawn Princess • Manitou Dawn • Masquerade (Golden Dawn album) • Misty Dawn • Mystic Places of Dawn • Night on Earth (Dawn of Relic album) • Night's Dawn Trilogy • Norman Dawn • Nuclear Dawn • Nyree Dawn Porter • Operation Red Dawn • Order of the New Dawn • P.M. Dawn • PM Dawn • Pacific Dawn (ship) • Padmore, Dawn • Pagan Dawn • Perpetual Dawn • Pistols at Dawn (Consumed album) • Prairie Dawn • Pre-dawn raid • Rage at Dawn • Rebel Dawn • Red Dawn • Red Devil Dawn • Red dawn (disambiguation) • Rescue Dawn • Rolls-Royce Silver Dawn • Sanitys Dawn/Fuck...I'm Dead • Savage Dawn • September Dawn • Shadow Dawn • Shot at Dawn Memorial • Sing to the Dawn • Steel Dawn • Tara Dawn Holland • The Darkest Hour Is Just Before Dawn • The Dawn • The Dawn (album) • The Dawn (band) • The Dawn Patrol (The O.C.) • The Dawn Rider • The Dawn-Breakers • The Doctor Came at Dawn • The Hour Before Dawn • The Night's Dawn Trilogy • The Open Source Order of the Golden Dawn • The Other Side of Dawn • The Robin Flies at Dawn • The Robots of Dawn • The Sword of the Dawn • The Temple of Dawn • The Voyage of the Dawn Treader • The other side of dawn • To da Break of Dawn • Uprising (Concord Dawn album) • Vincent Dawn • Voodoo Dawn • Wasting the Dawn

Dicionario analógico


dawn (n.)

start[Hyper.]

dawn[Dérivé]





dawn (v. intr.)

understand[Cause]



Wikipedia - ver também

Wikipedia

Dawn

                   
  Dawn is the beginning of morning twilight
  Dawn sky in Chicago
  Dawn sky in Metz, France.

Dawn (from an Old English verb dagian "to become day") is the time that marks the beginning of the twilight before sunrise. It is recognized by the presence of weak sunlight, while the sun itself is still below the horizon. Dawn should not be confused with sunrise, which is the moment when the leading edge of the sun itself appears above the horizon.

The duration of the twilight period between dawn and sunrise varies greatly depending on the observer's latitude, from a few minutes in equatorial regions to many hours in polar regions.

Contents

  Technical definitions

There are also more technical definitions of dawn, including the following:

Astronomical dawn 
the moment after which the sky is no longer completely dark; formally defined as the time at which the sun is 18 degrees below the horizon in the morning.[1]
Nautical dawn
the time at which there is enough sunlight for the horizon and some objects to be distinguishable; formally, when the sun is 12 degrees below the horizon in the morning.[1]
Civil dawn 
that time at which there is enough light for objects to be distinguishable, so that outdoor activities can commence; formally, when the sun is 6 degrees below the horizon in the morning.[1]
Solar dawn 
that time at which the leading edge of the sun reaches the horizon in the morning, ignoring the effect of atmospheric refraction.
  Panoramic view of a dawn in Higuerote, Venezuela.

  Causes and effects

  Early morning in Xepon, Laos (July 2004)
  A cloud becomes luminous in the Northern Sky at civil dawn in California, USA
  Civil dawn in Southern California, USA
  Civil dawn in Gorzow, Poland

During dawn (and dusk) it is usually possible (provided that the sky is cloud-free) to see approximately in which direction the sun is (though it's below the horizon). Though it is possible to localize the direction of the sun during astronomical dawn and dusk, people in general experience astronomical dawn and dusk as night, even without clouds. Zenith is dark and more than just the brightest shining stars can be seen (except low above the horizon in the direction of the sun).

At civil dawn there is no darkness in any direction, nor at zenith. The sky is bright, even when cloudy. In mid and northern Scandinavia, summer nights never get any further than to civil dusk or dawn. This period of "bright nights" is longer at higher latitudes (further north).

North of the polar circle (at 66°30′ N) the sun does not set at all at the summer solstice. The period of no sunset is longer closer to the North Pole. The angular radius of the polar circle is equal to the angle between the plane of Earth's equator and that of the ecliptic. At true solar noon at London (latitude 51°30′ N), the sun is at an angle of (90 - 51,5 =) 38.5 degrees above the horizon at the equinoxes. At winter solstice the "sun height" (solar elevation angle) is (38.5 - 23.5 =) 15.0 degrees above horizon. At summer solstice the "sun height" is instead (38.5 + 23.5 =) 62 degrees above horizon.

Nautical dawn is more difficult to describe. Near the summer solstice, latitudes higher than 54°30′ get no darker than nautical dawn/dusk; the "darkness of the night" varies greatly in these latitudes.

But while, for instance, Glasgow, Scotland at 55°51′ N and Copenhagen, Denmark at 55°40′ N get a few hours of "night feeling", Oslo, Norway at 59°56′ N and Stockholm, Sweden at 59°19′ N seems very bright all the time the sun is below the horizon. This may call for a different classification of dawn and dusk terminology for more practical use than astronomy. When the sun gets 9.0 to 9.5 degrees below the horizon (at summer solstice this is at latitudes 57°30′–57°00′), zenith gets dark even on cloud-free nights (if there is no full moon); more than just the brightest shining stars are clearly visible in a large majority of the sky.

All phases of dawn and dusk are shortest at the equator, where the sun at equinox rises and sets at a right angle to the horizon. Civil, nautical, and astronomical dawn and dusk last only 24 minutes each. Dawn and dusk times are fastest at the times around the equinoxes and slowest at summer and winter solstices on all places on the earth.

At the poles, the sun rises at the spring equinox and sets at the autumn equinox, with a long period of dawn/dusk, lasting for a few weeks .

  Mythology and religion

Many Indo-European mythologies have a dawn goddess, separate from the male Solar deity, her name deriving from PIE *h2ausos-, derivations of which include Greek Eos, Roman Aurora, Indian Ushas, Slavic Zornitsa and possibly a Germanic *Austrōn- (whence Easter). The Hindu dawn deity Aruṇa is male. In Native American mythology, Anpao is an entity with two faces.

Prime is the fixed time of prayer of the traditional Divine Office (Canonical Hours) in Christian liturgy, said at the first hour of daylight.

In Islam, dawn (Arabic fajr) is the time of the first prayer of the day, and the beginning of the daily fast during Ramadan. For such contexts, some Islamic writings teach that dawn may be easily determined by observing the contrast between white and black threads.[2]

  Literature

Homer used the stock epithet "rosy-fingered Dawn" frequently in The Iliad and The Odyssey.

An Aubade (Occitan Alba, German Tagelied) is a song about lovers having to separate at daybreak.

  See also

  References

  External links

   
               

 

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