MORN


Meaning of MORN in English

I. ˈmȯ(ə)rn, ˈmȯ(ə)n noun

( -s )

Etymology: Middle English morn, morwen dawn, morning, from Old English morgen; akin to Old High German morgan morning, Old Norse morginn, Gothic maurgins morning, Latin merus pure, unmixed, Greek marmairein to flash, sparkle, Sanskrit marīci ray of light

1.

a. : the beginning of the day : dawn , sunrise

it was the lark, the herlad of the morn — Shakespeare

a certain morn broke beautiful and blue — Robert Browning

b. : the first or early part of the day : morning

been on the go since morn — G.W.Brace

working from morn to night, he had no time for frills — John Buchan

2. chiefly dialect Britain : tomorrow — used with the

the morn ' s the Sabbath — J.M.Barrie

3. : east

the bugle that blows in lands of morn — A.E.Housman

II. adjective

: morning

Webster's New International English Dictionary.      Новый международный словарь английского языка Webster.