Need another word that means the same as “morning”? Find 15 synonyms and 30 related words for “morning” in this overview.
The synonyms of “Morning” are: forenoon, morn, morning time, aurora, break of day, break of the day, cockcrow, dawn, dawning, daybreak, dayspring, first light, sunrise, sunup, good morning
According to the Oxford Dictionary of English, “morning” as a noun can have the following definitions:
aurora | A natural electrical phenomenon characterized by the appearance of streamers of reddish or greenish light in the sky especially near the northern or southern magnetic pole The effect is caused by the interaction of charged particles from the sun with atoms in the upper atmosphere In northern and southern regions it is respectively called aurora borealis or Northern Lights and aurora australis or Southern Lights. |
break of day | The act of breaking something. |
break of the day | Breaking of hard tissue such as bone. |
cockcrow | Dawn. She helped him to dance until cockcrow. |
dawn | An opening time period. It was the dawn of the Roman Empire. |
dawning | The first light of day. The dawnings of civilization. |
daybreak | The time in the morning when daylight first appears; dawn. She set off at daybreak. |
dayspring | The first light of day. |
first light | The first or highest in an ordering or series. |
forenoon | The morning. The forenoon watch. |
good morning | Moral excellence or admirableness. |
morn | The time period between dawn and noon. I spent the morning running errands. |
morning time | The first light of day. |
sunrise | The colours and light visible in the sky on an occasion of the sun’s first appearance in the morning, considered as a view or spectacle. An hour before sunrise. |
sunup | The time in the morning when the sun appears or full daylight arrives. They worked from sunup to sundown. |
afternoon | In the afternoon every afternoon. I telephoned this afternoon. |
awake | Not asleep. Still not fully awake. |
dawn | An opening time period. The age of computers had dawned. |
day | The part of a day spent working. She cared for him for the rest of his days. |
daybreak | The first light of day. She set off at daybreak. |
daylight | The first appearance of light in the morning; dawn. The area is dangerous even in daylight. |
evening | In the evening every evening. An evening at the opera. |
february | The month following January and preceding March. |
friday | The sixth day of the week; the fifth working day. |
hour | A time of day specified as an exact number of hours from midnight or midday. The job will take more than an hour. |
january | The first month of the year; begins 10 days after the winter solstice. |
lunchtime | The time in the middle of the day when lunch is eaten. The lunchtime television news. |
midday | The middle of the day; noon. He awoke at midday. |
midnight | Twelve o’clock at night. The midnight hours. |
monday | The second day of the week; the first working day. |
noon | Twelve o’clock in the day; midday. The service starts at twelve noon. |
o'clock | According to the clock. |
saturday | The seventh and last day of the week; observed as the Sabbath by Jews and some Christians. |
sunday | United States evangelist (1862-1935. |
sunny | (of a place) receiving much sunlight. Seefeld is set high on a sunny plateau. |
sunrise | Atmospheric phenomena accompanying the daily appearance of the sun. High technology sunrise industries. |
thursday | The fifth day of the week; the fourth working day. |
tonight | During the night of the present day. Drop by tonight. |
tuesday | The third day of the week; the second working day. |
wake | Be awake be alert be there. His workers absented themselves for the local wakes. |
wednesday | The fourth day of the week; the third working day. |
week | The time spent working during a week. She works a 48 hour week. |
weekday | A day of the week other than Sunday or Saturday. The weekday rush hour. |
weekend | Spend a weekend somewhere. A weekend break. |
year | A period of time occupying a regular part of a calendar year that is used for some particular activity. A school year. |
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