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Verb: to draw towards evening
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1809 1840 1870s 1874
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15th c.
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- 1809, Joseph Hutton, School for Prodigals, published in The English and American Stage, Volume 30:
- See the red gleaming of the western skies, proclaims that day begins to advesperate, and nature to sink into repose!
- 1840, Baker Peter Smith, Trip to the Far West:
- The day advesperated, ere I left the church yard of Tregony; and I pursued, in the shades of evening, my route to St. AUSTLE.
- 1870s, J.E.L. Seneker, edited by Thomas Stone, Frontier Experience, or Epistolary Sesquipedalian Lexiphanicism from the Occident (2008 edited reprint):
- Ultimately, as the day began to advesperate, but prior to the cadence of Phœbus,—with pedal envelopes and the inferior portion of my femoral habiliments subjected to quite an illutation…
- 1874, Kellet Rigbye, The Poetical Works of Kellet Rigbye:
- Then when the day advesperates they meet
Within some neighbour’s cot to hold debate;
They talk of village news and future toil,
And then repair to Slumber’s arms awhile.