¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Midyears
1. midyear [n] - See also: midyear
Lexicographical Neighbors of Midyears
Literary usage of Midyears
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. An American at Oxford by John Corbin (1902)
"ulation to test a student's diligence, and thus had some snch relation to a degree
as our hour examinations, midyears, and finals. ..."
2. Technology Review by Massachusetts Institute of Technology Association of Class Secretaries, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Alumni Association (1899)
"... to fool the Faculty and survive midyears, and naturally it was impossible for
me to "Do It Now." Your ratio of discretion to valor in the choice of time ..."
3. Lives of the Queens of England: From the Norman Conquest by Agnes Strickland, Elisabeth Strickland (1852)
"He is of a middle stature, between fifty or midyears old, with a long grisly
beard."—Collection of State Letters and Papers, ..."
4. American Literature by Julian Willis Abernethy (1902)
"Ruskin's "Stones of Venice," "Seven Lamps of Architecture," and the third and
fourth volumes of "Modern Painters," Bulwer Lytton's The midyears of this ..."
5. Longer Plays by Modern Authors [American] by Helen Louise Cohen (1922)
"As Brander Matthews has recently observed: " The drama of our language . . .
underwent an eclipse in the midyears of the nineteenth century. ..."