English

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Noun

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Tuesnight (plural Tuesnights)

  1. (rare, nonstandard) Tuesday evening or night
    • 1866, Thomas Oswald Cockayne, Leechdoms, wortcunning, and starcraft of early England: Being a collection. (Anglo-Saxons), UNU9AAAAcAAJ:
      On the tenth month the woman does not escape with her life if the bairn is not born, since it turns in the belly to a deadly disorder, and oftenest on Tuesnight.
    • 2011, “Ward impresses judges on 'Dancing with the Stars'”, in The Blade[1]:
      Audiences will learn which couples will advance to next week's semifinals on Tuesnight's show.
    • 2013, “Daily auction prices up”, in Radio New Zealand News[2]:
      Global dairy prices rose more than 3% on Tuesnight, the largest rise since last September.
    • 2014, Elizabeth Fama, Plus One (Young Adult Fiction), →ISBN, page 75:
      On Tuesnight he had written, “Muir Woods National Monument?”
    • 2015, “Millwall’s David Forde says match against Blackburn is a must-win”, in The Guardian[3]:
      Harris will be without the suspended Ed Upson on Tuesnight and Shaun Williams and Shaun Cummings are also out.