day of days

See also: Day of Days

English

Pronunciation

  • (file)

Noun

day of days (plural days of days)

  1. (idiomatic) A particularly noteworthy day; the day on which a milestone or especially memorable event occurs.
    • 1850, Edgar Allan Poe, "Morella":
      "It is a day of days," she said, as I approached; "a day of all days either to live or die. . . . I am dying, yet shall I live."
    • 1907, Jack London, "The Pen: Long Days in a County Penitentiary":
      At last came the day of days, my release.
    • 1940 March 11, "Sport: Four Hundred Grand," Time (retrieved 9 July 2015):
      It was a day of days for California railbirds. Not only was it the day of the $100,000 Santa Anita Handicap, world's richest horse race, but this was the now-or-never race for doughty old Seabiscuit, darling of U. S. racing fans, Cinderella of the turf.
    • 2012 Sep. 8, George Vecsey, "Tennis: Rain and Rest Days Spell the End of Super Saturday," New York Times (retrieved 9 July 2015):
      Super Saturday has been the centerpiece of the United States Open for nearly three decades. But this day of days is heading toward a multimillion-dollar extreme makeover.
  2. (Christianity, sometimes capitalized) Sunday, especially Easter Sunday.
    • 1863 June 7, "To the Editor: Sunday Railway Excursions," New York Times (retrieved 9 July 2015):
      The residents skirting the line of the Harlem Railroad as far as Croton Falls, were not a little annoyed, last Sunday, by numerous cheap excursion trains. . . . [W]e doubt whether the law gave being to a great corporation for the purpose of tempting men from their homes on the Day of days.
    • 2009, Charles G. Fuller, Give Him Time, →ISBN, p. 107 (Google preview):
      To be sure, Christians celebrate the Resurrection of Christ every Sunday, but there is a special place for the celebration we call Easter. It should be approached as the Day of Days.

Usage notes

  • Used with more than random frequency to refer to major events in the sport of horse racing.

Synonyms

This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.