midsummer

listen to the pronunciation of midsummer
İngilizce - İngilizce
The first day of summer
Happening in the middle of summer
The period around the summer solstice; about 21st June in the northern hemisphere
Midsummer Day, the English quarter day
The middle of summer
the middle of the summer
{n} the summer-solstice, the longest day
June 21, when the sun is at its northernmost point
Summer Solstice, especially refering to this Solstice Sabbat
the Summer Solstice, so-called because the Celtic Summer began at Beltane and ended at Hallows
{i} middle of the summer, summer solstice
Midsummer is the period in the middle of the summer. In midsummer every town is impossibly crowded It was a lovely midsummer morning. the middle of summer
Sabbat celebrated in June [For more information see http: //www spiritonline com/wicca/3 html]
Midsummer Day
24th June, an English quarter day
midsummer madness
Madness attributable to the heat of summer, or to the midsummer moon

Why this is very midsummer madness.

midsummer moon
The full moon or the lunar month around midsummer
Midsummer Day
the 24th of June
Midsummer Night's Dream
play written by Shakespeare
Midsummer's Day
Midsummer's Day or Midsummer Day is the 24th of June
midsummer day
a quarter day in England, Wales, and Ireland
midsummer eve
the night before Midsummer Day
A Midsummer Night's Dream
a humorous play by William Shakespeare in which Oberon, the king of the fairies, puts a magic spell on Titania, his queen, while she is sleeping, so that she falls in love with the first creature she sees when she awakes. This is Bottom, a weaver who has been given the head of a donkey by Oberon's servant, Puck, who has magic powers. It is one of Shakespeare's most popular plays, and it is often performed outdoors in the summer
midsummers
plural of midsummer
midsummer

    Heceleme

    mid·sum·mer

    Türkçe nasıl söylenir

    mîdsʌmır

    Telaffuz

    /ˈmədˈsəmər/ /ˈmɪdˈsʌmɜr/

    Etimoloji

    () From Middle English, from Old English midsumer, midsumor (“midsummer”), from Proto-Germanic *midjaz (“mid-”), *sumaraz (“summer”), equivalent to mid- +‎ summer. More at mid, summer.