DAY, DAILY
ADJECTIVES/ADVERBS
1250 — A-DAY in or on the day (in opposition to the night; by day → obs.
1377 — A-DAYS by day, during the day, in the daytime → obs.
1398 — DAYISH pert. to day; diurnal → obs.
1400 — FROM SUN TO SUN from sunrise to sunset, all day → obs.
1430 — COTIDIALLY day by day → obs.
1500 — A-DAY on each day; daily
1500 — HODIERN of this day; belonging to the present day → obs.
1502 — QUOTIDIAL daily → obs.
1597 — DAYWARD towards the day
1597 — TRIDUAN lasting for three days; occurring every third day
1604 — SEPTUARY consisting of seven; of seven days → obs.
1613 — HEBDOMADAL consisting of or lasting seven days → obs.
1646 — QUATRIDUAL lasting for four days → obs.
1647 — NUDIUSTERTIAN of the day before yesterday → obs.
1651 — POSTRIDUAN done the next day after → obs.
1655 — TRICENARY pert. to thirty; containing, or lasting, thirty days → obs.
1656 — PRIDIAN pertaining to the previous day; relating to yesterday
1659 — HEBDOMATICAL weekly; consisting of seven days → obs.
1746 — TAPLY at break of day, early in the morning; privately; quickly → Eng. dial. obs.
1767 — WANING of the day: drawing to a close
1839 — DAYLESS not divided into days
1866 — BIDUOUS lasting for two days
1900 — DAILY-DAY every day, continually, constantly → Sc. (Bk.)
1900 — DATELY daily → Eng. dial. (Bk.)
1900 — DAY AN’ DAILY constantly, every day → Sc. & Ireland (Bk.)
NOUNS
..700 — TIDE any definite time in the course of the day. as noon-tide, etc.; the point at which any hour is completed → obs.
1000 — SENNIGHT a week; the space of seven days and nights → arch.
1380 — SPRINGING OF THE DAY the first appearance of day
1398 — QUADRANT a quarter of a day; six hours → obs.
1567 — LIGHTMANS the day, or daybreak → thieves’ cant
1576 — LATTER LAMMAS (DAY) a day that will never come → obs.
1591 — AFTERDAY a subsequent day; a later period
1603 — SEPTIMANE the space of seven days; a week → obs.
1646 — SEPTUARY a group of seven days; a week → obs.
1655 — FAR-DAY the latter part of the day → obs.
1710 — DOUP OF THE DAY the end of the day → Sc. obs.
1738 — ODD-COME-SHORTLY a day → sl.
1749 — TO-FALL OF THE DAY the close of day → Sc.
1832 — ODD-COME-SHORT a day → sl.
1837 — WEEKY-DAY a weekday → Amer. dial.
1872 — DAY-FALLING the close of day → Eng. dial.
1898 — THE LAST DAY the other day, a day or two ago → Sc.
1930 — SET OF SEVEN BRIGHTS a week; seven days → African-American sl.
NOUNS, PERSON
1630 — DAY-LIVER one who lives for a day, or for the day → obs.
PHRASES
1902 — MY MOTHER’S AWAY the other day → Aust. rhyming sl.
1960 — FROM CAN TO CAN’T all day long → US sl.
VERBS
1939 — PINK IN of the day: to grow dark → Amer. dial.