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Dawning   /dˈɔnɪŋ/   Listen
Dawning

noun
1.
The first light of day.  Synonyms: aurora, break of day, break of the day, cockcrow, dawn, daybreak, dayspring, first light, morning, sunrise, sunup.  "They talked until morning"



Dawn

verb
(past & past part. dawned; pres. part. dawning)
1.
Become clear or enter one's consciousness or emotions.  Synonyms: click, come home, fall into place, get across, get through, penetrate, sink in.  "She was penetrated with sorrow"
2.
Appear or develop.
3.
Become light.



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"Dawning" Quotes from Famous Books



... my suspicions. I could not fail to notice that he had twice told me to make trifling purchases, and that, although he had received some pennies in exchange for the first florin, he yet brought out a half-crown for the wax lights. My dawning suspicions grew stronger on the way home on a penny omnibus, when he offered the conductor ...
— Chatterbox, 1905. • Various

... heard that Dr. Jennings was contemplating taking Anna's place at the lodge, and he comprehended after a moment that Anna was already gone. Even then the significance of the situation was a little time in dawning on him. When it did, however, he rose ...
— The Street of Seven Stars • Mary Roberts Rinehart

... in perplexity, then, with a dawning perception, 'Oh! surely you don't mean they did ...
— Heartsease - or Brother's Wife • Charlotte M. Yonge

... with the Emperor, M. de Talleyrand gave him the extraordinary advice of working upon the ambition of the English family of Wellesley, and to excite in the mind of Wellington, the lustre of whose reputation was now dawning, ambitious projects which would have embarrassed the coalition. Napoleon, however, did not adopt this proposition, the issue of which he thought too uncertain, and above all, too remote, in the urgent ...
— The Memoirs of Napoleon Bonaparte • Bourrienne, Constant, and Stewarton

... need it again, it was not a difficult feat. Believe me, my biggest worry was that I would get sent west by one of our own shells. When I reached the front line I crawled in a funk hole and waited for dawning and for our own troops to come along. And when they started, man! how they came! The enemy is completely disorganized, Major, and victory will be ours within a month or six weeks. Maybe sooner. The Germans know it. Montfaucon will fall to-morrow. ...
— Aces Up • Covington Clarke


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