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Midsummer's Day
noun
- June 24, the feast of St John the Baptist; in England, Ireland, and Wales, one of the four quarter days See also summer solstice
Example Sentences
This is why you will find that many people refer to June 21 as “Midsummer’s Day.â€
"However, a less-used parallel system holds that June 21st is actually Midsummer's Day, which then requires the start of summer to be in early May."
Then, on December 5, a little more than two weeks before Midsummer’s Day, Endurance set sail from Grytviken.
First, on a midsummer’s day in 2016, I joined a group of whalers from Kaliningrad on the Baltic Sea who gather every year at a small city park notable for a large statue of two fighting bulls.
The moment would allow him to marinate in the scenic beauty of his new work environment on a warm midsummer’s day, pushing aside the worries that awaited.
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