nightly
English
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈnaɪtli/
Audio (Southern England) (file) - Rhymes: -aɪtli
- Homophone: knightly
Etymology 1
From Middle English nyȝtly, nihtlich, nihtlic, from Old English nihtlīċ, nihtelīċ (“nocturnal, nightly, of the night, at night”), equivalent to night + -ly. Cognate with Scots nichtlie (“nightly”), West Frisian nachtlik (“nightly, nocturnal”), Dutch nachtelijk (“nightly, nocturnal”), German nächtlich (“nocturnal, nightly”), Danish natlig (“nightly”), Swedish nattlig (“nightly, nocturnal”).
Adjective
nightly (not comparable)
- Happening or appearing in the night; night-time; nocturnal.
- nightly dews
- 1871, John Tyndall, Fragments of Science: A Series of Detached Essays, Lectures, and Reviews:
- A cobweb spread above a blossom Is sufficient to protect It from nightly chill.
- Performing, occurring, or taking place every night.
- The dog demanded to go out for his nightly walk.
- Used in the night.
Translations
happening in the night — see nocturnal
Etymology 2
From Middle English nyghtly, neghtly, from Old English *nihtlīċe (“nightly”), equivalent to night + -ly.
Adverb
nightly (not comparable)
- Every night.
- He checks his email nightly.
- 1979, The Boomtown Rats (lyrics and music), “Wind Chill Factor (Minus Zero)”, in The Fine Art of Surfacing:
- I practice nightly, I try to keep ahead / This art of surfacing is all but dead
Translations
Noun
nightly (plural nightlies)
- (computing) A build of a software program with the latest changes, released every night.
- 2014, Adam Onishi, Pro WordPress Theme Development, Apress, →ISBN, page 349:
- Depending on how brave you are, you can even set it to update to the “bleeding edge nightlies” instead of just the point release nightlies if you want to really see the cutting edge of WordPress core development.
Anagrams
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