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Looking for synonyms for "summer"? Browse alternatives ranked by relevance — sharper word choices for fiction, poetry, and copywriting.
(n)
The period or season of summer.
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Misspelling of summary. [An abstract or a condensed presentation of the substance of a body of material.]
The period around the summer solstice; around June 21st in the northern hemisphere.
The length of a year as marked by a calendar, 365 or 366 days in the Gregorian calendar; a calendar year.
Each of the four divisions of a year: spring, summer, autumn (fall) and winter
The natural light that is ambient in daytime, being mostly sunlight (both direct and indirect, on either sunny days or cloudy days).
(informal, Ireland) (usually after possessive) holiday, vacation; time off work, especially if spent travelling away from home
An extended period of leisure time away from work or school.
(countable) An act of springing: a leap, a jump.
A female given name commonly used in India.
A surname originating as an occupation for a summoner in court.
The state or fact of existence, consciousness, or life, or something in such a state.
(v)
(Southern US or African-American Vernacular) remote past form of be.
A surname.
(chiefly UK, Australia) A period of one or more days taken off work for leisure and often travel; often plural.
The act of moving to a lower position under the effect of gravity.
(fandom slang) The collective name for any kind of person that changes into another form under certain conditions, including the werewolf.
(countable) A pigmented filament of keratin which grows from a follicle on the skin of humans and other mammals.
(uncountable) A person's lot (good or bad), luck, fortune, fate.
The collective property and liabilities of someone, especially a deceased person.
(historical) An ancient dynasty in China.
An island of Eastern Visayas, Visayas, Philippines.
Someone who or something which performs arithmetic addition; a machine for adding numbers.
A small coastal town and community in Gwynedd, Wales (OS grid ref SH5831).
A male given name from the Germanic languages.
A surname from German.
(personal) To provide a service (or, by extension, a product, especially food or drink).
A dockworker involved in loading and unloading cargo, or in supervising such work.
The unpleasantly hot days of late summer.
(adj)
Of or relating to summer.
(dated, literary) Summertime.
Alternative spelling of aestivation. [(biology) A state of inactivity and metabolic depression during summer: the summer version of hibernation.]
(archaic) Synonym of dog days.
Any season in which little rain falls; used especially in the tropics where it alternates with the rainy season.
(idiomatic) The hottest part of the summer.
The season of spring, between winter and summer.
The break in the working week, usually two days including the traditional holy or sabbath day. Thus in Western countries, Saturday and Sunday.
Any period of seven consecutive days.
The season of winter, between autumn and spring.
A period into which a year is divided, historically based on the phases of the moon.
The middle of winter.
Alternative form of school year. [(education) The academic year of a school.]
A city in Yolo County, California, United States.
The time of day between afternoon and night.
(adv)
At weekends.
The part of the day from noon or lunchtime until sunset, evening, or suppertime or 6pm.
Every afternoon.
(informal, somewhat dated) In the evening, during the evening.
(possibly offensive) A stretch of sunny and warm, often hazy, days during late autumn.
A female given name from English of modern usage.
A day in summer.
The early part of summer
One of the dog days of summer: a late-summer day.
A short period after summer.
A short period of warm weather around St Luke's Day (18 October); an Indian summer (also figuratively).
The full moon or the lunar month around midsummer.
(astronomy) The moment when the Earth is in that point of its orbit where the northern or southern hemisphere is most inclined toward the sun.
June solstice, when the sun reaches the northernmost point of the sky.
A heat haze.
Transition period between spring and summer: late spring.
A (usually) short period of hot weather. Sometimes a heat wave.
(UK, Ireland, travel) The off-season holiday market, typically to destinations in North Africa and Southern Europe.
(informal, psychology) Seasonal affective disorder during the summer season.
(British) daylight saving time
A period of calm, warm weather often experienced about the time of Martinmas; Indian summer.
Madness attributable to the heat of summer, or to the midsummer moon.
The part of the year when the monsoon occurs, the rainy season.
(obsolete or eye dialect) Summer.
(idiomatic) A period of exceptionally hot weather.
A period of rainy weather brought by southwesterly winds affecting much of the tropics from July to September.
Tropical rainy season when the rain lasts for several months with few interruptions.
The year 1816, in which the severe climate abnormalities of a volcanic winter caused average global temperatures to decrease.
(British spelling) Alternative spelling of St. Martin's summer. [A period of warm weather in early November.]
(US) The holiday marking the unofficial end of summer, held on the first Monday in September.
(time) A unit of time of one twenty-fourth of a day (sixty minutes).
The irregular period from one new moon until the next.
(plural noun, dated) A period of hot weather.
A year's time; the space of time equivalent to a year.
(often Nigeria) The final four months of the year: September, October, November, and December.
June 27 in Germany (Siebenschläfertag), a day whose weather is supposed to determine the average weather of the next seven weeks.