a. m.

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English

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Adverb

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a. m. (not comparable)

  1. Alternative form of a.m.
    • 1804 May 26, Caledonian Mercury[1], number 12,905, Edinburgh: [] Robert Allan:
      Yeſterday at half paſt five a. m. I received information from Captain Hancock, then off Oſtend, that the enemy’s flotilla was hauling out of that pier, and had already twenty-one one-maſted veſſels, and one ſchooner, outſide in the roads;
    • 1823 July 10, The Morning Post[2], number 16,396:
      []; and remain with the outward bound as per last, except the Mary for Calcutta, which sailed at five a. m.
    • 1930 October 4, Joseph Faus, ““Oh, Miss Dentist!”: Being the ridiculous romance of Oliver Whidden, insurance salesman, who found his love in the cavity of a bad tooth”, in Wisconsin Rapids Daily Tribune, seventeenth year, number 5286, Wisconsin Rapids, Wis., page six:
      Come again Tuesday at 10 a. m. [] TUESDAY at 10 a. m. Mr. Oliver Whidden was no sooner in the chair than the dentistress synchronously began dental and verbal operations.
    • 1958 October 12, Cumberland Sunday Times, volume LXXXIX, number 281, Cumberland, Md., page four:
      He goes into an all-night doughnutery at 3:40 a. m. and falls to talking with the lonely counterman, who is a college student as well and who isn’t satisfied with just selling doughnuts and coffee. He looks into things. THIS SAME young man’s bride, also a college student and part-time researcher, came in at 3:55 a. m and her contribution to lore was that the first home air-conditioning unit was seven feet high, six feet wide and twenty feet long and was installed in the three-story mansion of Charlie Gates, son of John W. (Bet-a-Million) Gates.

Anagrams

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Spanish

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Etymology

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Abbreviation of Latin ante meridiem (before noon).

Adverb

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a. m.

  1. a.m.

See also

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