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2 definitions found
From:
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
Dog days
,
dog-days
A
period
of
from
four
to
six
weeks
,
in
the
summer
,
variously
placed
by
almanac
makers
between
the
early
part
of
July
and
the
early
part
of
September
;
canicular
days
; --
so
called
in
reference
to
the
rising
in
ancient
times
of
the
Dog
Star
(
Sirius
)
with
the
sun
.
Popularly
,
the
sultry
,
close
part
of
the
summer
;
metaphorically
,
a
period
of
inactivity
.
Syn:
--
dog
days
,
canicule
,
canicular
days
.
Note:
☞
The
conjunction
of
the
rising
of
the
Dog
Star
with
the
rising
of
the
sun
was
regarded
by
the
ancients
as
one
of
the
causes
of
the
sultry
heat
of
summer
,
and
of
the
maladies
which
then
prevailed
.
But
as
the
conjunction
does
not
occur
at
the
same
time
in
all
latitudes
,
and
is
not
constant
in
the
same
region
for
a
long
period
,
there
has
been
much
variation
in
calendars
regarding
the
limits
of
the
dog
days
.
The
astronomer
Roger
Long
states
that
in
an
ancient
calendar
in
Bede
(
died
735)
the
beginning
of
dog days
is
placed
on
the
14th
of
July
;
that
in
a
calendar
prefixed
to
the
Common
Prayer
,
printed
in
the
time
of
Queen
Elizabeth
,
they
were
said
to
begin
on
the
6th
of
July
and
end
on
the
5th
of
September
;
that
,
from
the
Restoration
(1660)
to
the
beginning
of
New
Style
(1752),
British
almanacs
placed
the
beginning
on
the
19th
of
July
and
the
end
on
the
28th
of
August
;
and
that
after
1752
the
beginning
was
put
on
the
30th
of
July
,
the
end
on
the
7th
of
September
.
Some
English
calendars
now
put
the
beginning
on
July
3d,
and
the
ending
on
August
11th.
A
popular
American
almanac
of
the
present
time
(1890)
places
the
beginning
on
the
25th
of
July
,
and
the
end
on
the
5th
of
September
.
◄
►
From:
WordNet (r) 2.0
dog
days
n
:
the
hot
period
between
early
July
and
early
September
;
a
period
of
inactivity
[
syn
:
canicule
,
canicular days
]
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