See also: Sunrise

English

edit
 
a sunrise

Etymology

edit

From Middle English sonne-rys, sunne ryse, equivalent to sun +‎ rise. Compare Middle English son risyng, sunne rijsyng, sonne-rysing (sunrise, literally sun rising).

Pronunciation

edit

Noun

edit

sunrise (countable and uncountable, plural sunrises)

  1. The time of day when the sun appears above the eastern horizon.
    Synonyms: sunup, daybreak, sparrow-fart (slang); see also Thesaurus:dawn
    Antonyms: sunset, sundown; see also Thesaurus:dusk
    Coordinate term: moonrise
    I'll meet you at the docks at sunrise.
  2. The change in color of the sky at dawn.
    Antonym: sunset
    Did you see the beautiful sunrise this morning?
  3. (figuratively) Any great awakening.
    Antonym: sunset
    Coordinate term: twilight
    It was the sunrise of her spirit.
    • 1915, Mrs. Hugh Fraser, Storied Italy[1]:
      Her face shone for a moment with new and unearthly splendour, her eyes lighted up with a very sunrise of joy.
    • 1898, F. R. Chandler, The Story of Lake Geneva, Or, Summer Homes for City People[2]:
      It is in its zenith at mid-June, a very sunrise of Nature; and what with its forest and flower- fringed shores, its palace homes and parks, each with its white-winged or canopied yacht for skimming the lake at will, it at once occurred to me that Paradise had already been discovered and appropriated by Lake Geneva loiterers.

Derived terms

edit

Translations

edit
The translations below need to be checked and inserted above into the appropriate translation tables. See instructions at Wiktionary:Entry layout § Translations.

See also

edit

Verb

edit

sunrise (third-person singular simple present sunrises, present participle sunrising, simple past and past participle sunrised)

  1. (business, uncommon, transitive) To phase in.
    Antonym: sunset
    • 2015, Matthias Gross, Linsey McGoey, editors, Routledge International Handbook of Ignorance Studies[3], Routledge, →ISBN:
      In the first type (upper left quadrant), alternative industrial movements (AIMs) focus on the sunrising of new technologies.
  2. (idiomatic, intransitive, rare) To awake.
    • 1924, Claude Ewing Rusk, Tales Of A Western Mountaineer, A Record of Mountain Experiences on the Pacific Coast, page 301:
      As I "sunrised" and breakfasted, I saw the party of men and women that had come to Horse Camp with the pack-train filing up the long slope below.
  3. (idiomatic, transitive, rare) To cheer up, brighten, or illuminate.
    • 1981, Hugh Zachary, To Guard The Right, page 63:
      "That would be nice of you." She sunrised him again with her smile.
  4. (idiomatic, rare) This term needs a definition. Please help out and add a definition, then remove the text {{rfdef}}.
    • 1922, H. Walter Staner, Henry Sturmey (contributors), “Motoring 25 Years Ago”, in The Autocar[4], volume 48, page 308:
      The two steepest gradients over which we took the car were Sunrising (on the Stratford-Oxford road) and Edge Hill (on the Warwick-Banbury road

See also

edit

Further reading

edit

Anagrams

edit