Thesaurus.com
Dictionary.com
Showing results for midsummer. Search instead for mordsrummels.
Definitions

midsummer

[mid-suhm-er, -suhm-] / ˈmɪdˈsʌm ər, -ˌsʌm- /


Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

A softer print would support the idea that the midsummer spike has already passed through the system.

From Barron's

Special grand juries sit for longer terms than regular panels — and this one is slated to sit until midsummer.

From Washington Post

This seed mix requires infrequent mowing — after midsummer when the wildflowers bloom — but is a “great compromise where a lawnlike aesthetic is needed or desired.”

From Seattle Times

In midsummer, it came time for the teacher to test his student.

From Washington Post

If his team sputters out of contention by midsummer as it has in recent years, the greatest two-way player in baseball history is likely to go elsewhere as a free agent.

From Washington Post