to see daylight
11daylight — See: SCARE OUT OF ONE S WITS or SCARE THE DAYLIGHTS OUT OF, SEE DAYLIGHT …
12daylight — See: SCARE OUT OF ONE S WITS or SCARE THE DAYLIGHTS OUT OF, SEE DAYLIGHT …
13daylight — See: scare out of one s wits or scare the daylights out of, see daylight …
14Daylight saving time — This article is about daylight saving time in general. For DST in a specific location, see Daylight saving time by country. Summer time and DST redirect here. For other uses, see Summer time (disambiguation) and DST (disambiguation) …
15Daylight — For other uses, see Daylight (disambiguation). World map showing the areas of the Earth receiving daylight around 13:00 UTC, April 2nd. Daylight or the light of day is the combination of all direct and indirect sunlight outdoors during the… …
16daylight — noun (U) 1 the light produced by the sun during the day: We ll keep working while there s still enough daylight. 2 daylight robbery BrE informal a situation in which something costs you a lot more than it should: £2.50 for a cup of coffee? It s… …
17daylight — /day luyt /, n., adj., v., daylighted or daylit, daylighting. n. 1. the light of day: At the end of the tunnel they could see daylight. 2. public knowledge or awareness; openness: The newspaper article brought the scandal out into the daylight. 3 …
18daylight saving — noun time during which clocks are set one hour ahead of local standard time; widely adopted during summer to provide extra daylight in the evenings • Syn: ↑daylight saving time, ↑daylight savings time, ↑daylight savings • Hypernyms: ↑time * * *… …
19daylight time — noun see daylight saving time * * * ˌdaylight ˈsaving time [daylight saving time] (abbr. DST) (also ˈdaylight time …
20daylight — day|light [ deı,laıt ] noun uncount * the light outside that you see during the day: The large windows let in plenty of daylight. a. the period of time during the day when it is light: It was still daylight when we left. see daylight to… …