The party will take place from noon to 4 p.m.
He showed up at precisely 12 noon.
Recent Examples on the WebVote below for the queen bee's name Voting will close at noon Thursday, May 23.—Jenny Porter Tilley, The Indianapolis Star, 20 May 2024 The nomination period and poll voting will open every Monday and close at noon each Thursday.—Gege Reed, The Courier-Journal, 20 May 2024 See all Example Sentences for noon
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Word History
Etymology
Middle English, from Old English nōn ninth hour from sunrise, from Latin nona, from feminine of nonus ninth; akin to Latin novem nine — more at nine
: the middle of the day : 12 o'clock in the daytime
noonadjective
Etymology
Old English nōn "ninth hour from sunrise," derived from Latin nona, a feminine form of nonus "ninth," from novem "nine"
Word Origin
Noon has not always meant "12 o'clock in the daytime." In the ancient Roman way of keeping track of time, the hours of the day were counted from sunrise to sunset. The ninth hour of their day (about 3 p.m. nowadays) was called nona, Latin for "ninth." In the early period of English, the word was borrowed as nōn, also referring to the ninth hour after sunrise. By the 14th century, however, the word came to be used for midday, 12 o'clock, as we use it today.
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