Definify.com

Webster 1913 Edition


Dogday

{

Dog′ dayˊ

or

Dog′dayˊ

}
.
One of the dog days.
Dogday cicada
(Zool.)
,
a large American cicada (
Cicada pruinosa
), which trills loudly in midsummer.
☞ The conjunction of the rising of the Dog Star with the rising of the sun was regarded by the ancients as one of the causes of the sultry heat of summer, and of the maladies which then prevailed. But as the conjunction does not occur at the same time in all latitudes, and is not constant in the same region for a long period, there has been much variation in calendars regarding the limits of the dog days. The astronomer Roger Long states that in an ancient calendar in
Bede
(died 735) the beginning of
dog days
is placed on the 14th of July; that in a calendar prefixed to the Common Prayer, printed in the time of
Queen Elizabeth
, they were said to begin on the 6th of July and end on the 5th of September; that, from the Restoration (1660) to the beginning of New Style (1752), British almanacs placed the beginning on the 19th of July and the end on the 28th of August; and that after 1752 the beginning was put on the 30th of July, the end on the 7th of September. Some English calendars now put the beginning on July 3d, and the ending on August 11th. A popular American almanac of the present time (1890) places the beginning on the 25th of July, and the end on the 5th of September.

Webster 1828 Edition


Dogday

DOGDAY

,
Noun.
One of the days when Sirius or the dogstar rises and sets with the sun. The dogdays commence the latter part of July, and end the beginning of September.