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New Year's Day
noun
- January 1, celebrated as a holiday in many countries.
New Year's Day
noun
- Jan 1, celebrated as a holiday in many countries Often (US and Canadian informal) shortened toNew Year's
51³Ô¹Ï History and Origins
Origin of New Year's Day1
Example Sentences
Was on a 10-race losing run when won well at Cheltenham on New Year's Day.
The same exemption was cited for a records request regarding a small blaze on New Year’s Day in the Palisades that might be linked the Jan. 7 fire.
“Obviously we have our eye on trying to get home ice for playoffs,†said Kuemper, who posted his first shutout since New Year’s Day against a team that hadn’t been blanked since the seventh game of the season.
On New Year’s Day in 1979, a magnitude 5.2 quake hit about eight miles south of Malibu Point, notable because it struck during the Rose Bowl game between USC and Michigan.
I looked at pictures we’d taken at Eaton Canyon on New Year’s Day, a week before the fire: Our baby wrapped against my chest smiling her toothless grin; my feet planted in the stream.
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