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Definition of Natal day
1. Noun. The date on which a person was born.
Lexicographical Neighbors of Natal Day
Literary usage of Natal day
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Days and Deeds: A Book of Verse for Children's Reading and Speaking by Elizabeth Shepard Butler Stevenson (1906)
"... natal day Wake her with the voice of cannon—give her colors to the morn!
Make the day right glorious that saw the nation born; Born to a life supernal, ..."
2. History of California by Theodore Henry Hittell (1897)
"... which they themselves celebrated with salvos and salutes, is, as appropriately
perhaps as any other, to be considered the natal day of Alta California. ..."
3. The Works of the English Poets, from Chaucer to Cowper: Including the Series by Samuel Johnson (1810)
"Tune, shepherds, tune the festive lay, And hail Melissa's natal day. With Nature's
incense to the skies Let all your fervid wishes rise, ..."
4. The Black Hills, Or, The Last Hunting Ground of the Dakotahs: A Complete by Annie D. Tallent (1899)
"HOW WE CELEBRATED OUR natal day IN 1876. The Centennial Anniversary of our nation's
birth was by no means forgotten by the people of the Black Hills, ..."
5. Friendship's Offering, and Winter's Wreath.: And Winter's Wreath: a by Thomas Kibble Hervey, Leitch Ritchie (1829)
"upon thy natal day I brought some childish gift to thee ; But now I bring the
poet's lay, A tribute to thy memory ! I used to kiss thy smiling cheek, ..."
6. Letters from Abroad to Kindred at Home by Catharine Maria Sedgwick (1841)
"It was St. Catharine's festa, too, being her natal day, and we were passing by
a little chapel, built on the site of the very house in which she was born; ..."