red letter day
See also: red-letter day
English
    
    Alternative forms
    
Etymology
    
An allusion to the practice, dating to classical antiquity, of marking important days in red on calendars.
Pronunciation
    
- Audio (AU) - (file) 
Noun
    
red letter day (plural red letter days)
- A day marked in red on calendars; a church feast day.
-  1825, Christian Gleaner and Domestic Magazine, Volume 2, page 161:- The only red-letter day occurring in July, is the twenty-fifth, called St James's Day.
 
 
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- (idiomatic) A particularly significant day; a day of personal or sectarian celebration.
- Monday was a red letter day for her. She accomplished a lot and had fun doing it.
- We saw losses for days in a row, but Black Tuesday was the worst red letter day of them all.
 -  1975, John Ankenbruck, Twentieth Century History of Fort Wayne, page 286:- "In the meantime, the St. Valentine's Day Massacre at Chicago was a red-letter day in the gangster wars."
 
-  2007, Clyde Wilton, Wilton's Wit, iUniverse, page 3:- So I assume that we all have some red letter days that are precious to our memories—maybe a first date, a wedding, a gift, a word of encouragement, a vacation, a graduation or a trip to an interesting place.
 I had one of those red letter days when I was a young boy, perhaps five or six years old.
 
- 2010, Eric Braun, Doris Day, Hachette, Revised and updated edition, unnumbered page,
- That was, indeed, a red-letter day in my filmgoing life, and a red-letter day in my literary life was when I was asked to write a new biography of Doris Day.
 
 
Usage notes
    
Synonyms
    
- day of days
- red letter date
Antonyms
    
- black letter day
Translations
    
day of special significance
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See also
    
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