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Covidtide. In DICTIOUS you will not only get to know all the dictionary meanings for the word
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English
Etymology
From COVID + -tide (“time”), by analogy with liturgical seasons such as Christmastide.
Pronunciation
Proper noun
Covidtide
- (neologism, chiefly Christianity) The period of the COVID-19 pandemic.
- Synonyms: Coronatide, coronatime, coronatimes
2020 March 22, @subtle_mullet, “In the past 24 hours I played skyrim for 10 ”, in Twitter, archived from the original on March 23, 2020:In the past 24 hours I played skyrim for 10, and ate a whole pizza, and that isn't all. Covidtide is exposing the paucity of the american dream much more efficiently than lent
2020 November, Dean Pinter, “Prayer and Scripture Are the Daily Bread in Moose Jaw”, in The Saskatchewan Anglican, Regina, Saskatchewan: Diocese of Saskatchewan / Diocese of Saskatoon / Diocese of Qu’Appelle, retrieved February 7, 2022, page 4:Like so many other congregations, St. Aidan is adapting its life together to realities created by this extended season of “Covidtide.”
2020 December 2, Maria Wiering, “Catholics Say They’re Able to Deepen Their Approach to Advent Season This Year”, in Angelus (Catholic News Service), Los Angeles, retrieved February 7, 2020:Advent during "Covidtide," as some have termed the pandemic, allows families to enter a type of "family cocoon" or period of dormancy, said Anne Nicklaus, 57, whose family belongs to Our Lady of Peace Parish in Minneapolis.
2021, Brad East, The Doctrine of Scripture, Eugene, Oregon: Cascade Books, →ISBN, page xvi:Even in lockdown, even in Covidtide, our house has continued to brim over with life.
2021 December, Ted Olsen, “Screening Visitors”, in Christianity Today, volume 65, number 9, →ISSN, page 22:COVID-19 might have further ruptured Christian unity as we debated mandatory vaccines and masking, but there’s one thing we can all agree on based on our experiences over Covidtide: Video calls are a bad substitute for human presence.
- For more quotations using this term, see Citations:Covidtide.