morning

morning
\ \ [13] The Old English word for ‘morning’ was morgen. It came from a prehistoric Germanic *murganaz (source also of German, Dutch, and Danish morgenmorning’), and links have been suggested with forms such as Old Church Slavonic mruknatidarken’ and Lithuanian mirgetitwinkle’, which may point to an underlying etymological notion of the ‘glimmer of morning twilight’. By the Middle English period the word morgen had evolved to what we now know as morn, and morning was derived from it on the analogy of evening. A parallel development of morgen was to Middle English morwe, from which we get modern English morrow (and hence tomorrow).
\ \ Cf.MORN, TOMORROW

Word origins - 2ed. . 2005.

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  • Morning — モーニング …   Википедия

  • Morning — Morn ing, a. Pertaining to the first part or early part of the day; being in the early part of the day; as, morning dew; morning light; morning service. [1913 Webster] She looks as clear As morning roses newly washed with dew. Shak. [1913… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • Morning (EP) — Morning EP by Mae Released April 19, 2009 Recorded …   Wikipedia

  • morning — (n.) mid 13c., morn, morewen (see MORN (Cf. morn)) + suffix ing, on pattern of EVENING (Cf. evening). Originally the time just before sunrise. As an adjective from 1530s. Morning after in reference to a hangover is from 1884; in reference to a… …   Etymology dictionary

  • morning — [môr′niŋ] n. [ME morweninge (by analogy with EVENING) < OE morgen, morning, akin to Ger < IE base * mer(e)k , to glimmer, twilight > obs. Czech mrkati, to dawn, grow dark] 1. the first or early part of the day, from midnight, or esp.… …   English World dictionary

  • Morning — Morn ing (m[^o]rn [i^]ng), n. [OE. morning, morwening. See {Morn}.] 1. The first or early part of the day, variously understood as the earliest hours of light, the time near sunrise; the time from midnight to noon, from rising to noon, etc. [1913 …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • morning — ► NOUN 1) the period of time between midnight and noon, especially from sunrise to noon. 2) sunrise. ► ADVERB (mornings) informal ▪ every morning. ORIGIN from MORN(Cf. ↑morn), on the pattern of evening …   English terms dictionary

  • morning — [n] first part of the day after midnight, AM, ante meridiem, aurora, before lunch, before noon, breakfast time*, break of day, cockcrow*, crack of dawn*, dawn, daybreak, daylight, dayspring, early bright*, first blush*, foreday, forenoon, morn*,… …   New thesaurus

  • morning — morn|ing1 W1S1 [ˈmo:nıŋ US ˈmo:r ] n [U and C] [Date: 1200 1300; Origin: morn + ing (as in evening)] 1.) the early part of the day, from when the sun rises until 12 o clock in the middle of the day ▪ It was a nice sunny morning. ▪ I hated those… …   Dictionary of contemporary English

  • morning — noun ADJECTIVE ▪ this, tomorrow, yesterday ▪ following, next ▪ previous ▪ Friday, Saturday …   Collocations dictionary

  • Morning — Not to be confused with Mourning. Early morning redirects here. For the play, see Early Morning. For other uses, see Morning (disambiguation). Morning mist …   Wikipedia

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