convict hour
English
editEtymology
editconvict + hour, as criminal activities might be expected to take place in the quiet hours of the night.
Proper noun
edit- Around four to five o'clock in the morning.
- 1951 Autumn, Saul Bellow, “The Coblins”, in The Sewanee Review, volume 59, number 4, The Johns Hopkins University Press, →JSTOR, page 651:
- At the convict hour between four and five when even those with the least to fear are darkened and sober, and back away from waking.
- 2008, Laura Pedersen, The Big Shuffle, Random House:
- The beauty of four in the morning is not its furnishings and décor, but its aim-lessness and stolen quality. I suppose that's why Cappy always calls it “The Convict Hour.”