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BNC: 22542 COCA: 17046

matinee

matinee noun
or matinée /ˌmætn̩ˈneɪ/ Brit /ˈmætəˌneɪ/
plural matinees or matinées
matinee
noun
or matinée /ˌmætn̩ˈneɪ/ Brit /ˈmætəˌneɪ/
plural matinees or matinées
Learner's definition of MATINEE
[count]
: a play, movie, etc., that is performed or shown in the afternoon(戏剧、电影等的)午后演出,日场
BNC: 22542 COCA: 17046

matinee

noun

mat·​i·​nee ˌma-tə-ˈnā How to pronounce matinee (audio)
variants or matinée
: a musical or dramatic performance or social or public event held in the daytime and especially the afternoon
The Saturday matinee was so crowded that we had to sit in the second row.

Did you know?

Soiree: A Fancy Evening Party

In English, soiree means “a fancy evening affair.” The word comes directly from French and was formed from the word soir, meaning “evening” or “night.” The French make a subtle distinction between soir, which refers explicitly to the time of day following sunset, and soirée, which refers to some duration of time, usually translated as “evening.” English speakers don’t use different words, but we understand the difference between “I’ll see you tomorrow evening” and “We spent the evening playing cards”—one refers to a time of day and one refers to the passage of time. From the idea of a period of time evolved the second meaning of soirée: a party that takes place during the evening. As is typical for words that have been borrowed from modern French, soiree in English signifies the fancy version of a simple “party”: an evening event that is formal or refined in some way.

A third sense of soirée in French, “an evening performance,” has a parallel with matinée, from matin “morning. ” Matinée literally means “morning performance” in French but has come to mean “daytime or afternoon performance” in English. The “evening performance” meaning of soirée has not been adopted by English. Our Unabridged of 1934, however, did record both a verb soiree (meaning, presumably, “to hold or attend an evening party”) and the variant swarry, “so spelled in mimicry of mispronunciation.”

Soiree can be spelled in English using the acute accent as soirée, but is usually spelled without it.

Example Sentences

Recent Examples on the Web Boston can still salvage something from a difficult weekend as rookie Brayan Bello takes the ball for a Sunday matinee, looking to get settled in the big leagues after getting roughed up twice by the Rays in his first two starts. Globe Staff, BostonGlobe.com, 24 July 2022 Locals could go to the theater for a double matinee on a Sunday, or stop by the counter at the drugstore for what was rumored to be the best fountain cherry Coke anywhere in the world. Caroline Kitchener, Anchorage Daily News, 15 July 2022 Locals could go to the theater for a double matinee on a Sunday, or stop by the counter at the drugstore for what was rumored to be the best fountain cherry Coke anywhere in the world. Caroline Kitchener, Washington Post, 14 July 2022 After the visit from the O’s, the Tigers head back to Clearwater for a matinee with Bryce Harper and the Phillies on Sunday. Ryan Ford, Detroit Free Press, 2 Apr. 2022 With temperatures in Las Vegas expected to hit triple digits all week, this is excellent preparation and conditioning for the season opener — a 1 p.m. matinee in Miami Gardens Sept. 11. Jim Mcbride, BostonGlobe.com, 21 Aug. 2022 Performances are Tuesday at 7 p.m., Wednesday through Saturday at 8 p.m. and Sunday at 3 p.m. plus a 2 p.m. matinee on Aug. 31. Christopher Arnott, Hartford Courant, 18 Aug. 2022 Next: The series concludes with a Sunday matinee at Kauffman Stadium. Joe Noga, cleveland, 9 July 2022 That may not sound like a fun afternoon at the theater, but the two-hour play that closed its run with a Sunday matinee at Lamplighters Community Theatre in La Mesa was surprisingly funny, clever, touching and entertaining. San Diego Union-Tribune, 21 June 2022 See More

Word History

Etymology

French matinée, literally, morning, from Old French, from matin morning, from Latin matutinum, from neuter of matutinus of the morning, from Matuta, goddess of morning; akin to Latin maturus ripe — more at mature

First Known Use

1848, in the meaning defined above

Time Traveler
The first known use of matinee was in 1848
BNC: 22542 COCA: 17046

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