Source : Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
Night \Night\, n. [OE. night, niht, AS. neaht, niht; akin to D.
nacht, OS. & OHG. naht, G. nacht, Icel. n?tt, Sw. natt, Dan.
nat, Goth. nachts, Lith. naktis, Russ. noche, W. nos, Ir.
nochd, L. nox, noctis, gr. ?, ?, Skr. nakta, nakti. [root]
265. Cf. {Equinox}, {Nocturnal}.]
1. That part of the natural day when the sun is beneath the
horizon, or the time from sunset to sunrise; esp., the
time between dusk and dawn, when there is no light of the
sun, but only moonlight, starlight, or artificial light.
And God called the light Day, and the darkness he
called Night. --Gen. i. 5.
2. Hence:
(a) Darkness; obscurity; concealment.
Nature and nature's laws lay hid in night.
--Pope.
(b) Intellectual and moral darkness; ignorance.
(c) A state of affliction; adversity; as, a dreary night
of sorrow.
(d) The period after the close of life; death.
She closed her eyes in everlasting night.
--Dryden.
(e) A lifeless or unenlivened period, as when nature seems
to sleep. ``Sad winter's night''. --Spenser.
Note: Night is sometimes used, esp. with participles, in the
formation of self-explaining compounds; as,
night-blooming, night-born, night-warbling, etc.
{Night by night}, {Night after night}, nightly; many nights.
So help me God, as I have watched the night, Ay,
night by night, in studying good for England.
--Shak.
{Night bird}. (Zo["o]l.)
(a) The moor hen ({Gallinula chloropus}).
(b) The Manx shearwater ({Puffinus Anglorum}).
{Night blindness}. (Med.) See {Hemeralopia}.
{Night cart}, a cart used to remove the contents of privies
by night.
{Night churr}, (Zo["o]l.), the nightjar.
{Night crow}, a bird that cries in the night.
{Night dog}, a dog that hunts in the night, -- used by
poachers.
{Night fire}.
(a) Fire burning in the night.
(b) Ignis fatuus; Will-o'-the-wisp; Jask-with-a-lantern.
{Night flyer} (Zo["o]l.), any creature that flies in the
night, as some birds and insects.
{night glass}, a spyglass constructed to concentrate a large
amount of light, so as see objects distinctly at night.
--Totten.
{Night green}, iodine green.
{Night hag}, a witch supposed to wander in the night.
{Night hawk} (Zo["o]l.), an American bird ({Chordeiles
Virginianus}), allied to the goatsucker. It hunts the
insects on which it feeds toward evening, on the wing, and
often, diving down perpendicularly, produces a loud
whirring sound, like that of a spinning wheel. Also
sometimes applied to the European goatsuckers. It is
called also {bull bat}.
{Night heron} ({Zo["o]l}.), any one of several species of
herons of the genus {Nycticorax}, found in various parts
of the world. The best known species is {Nycticorax
griseus}, or {N. nycticorax}, of Europe, and the American
variety (var. n[ae]vius). The yellow-crowned night heron
({Nycticorax violaceus}) inhabits the Southern States.
Called also {qua-bird}, and {squawk}.
{Night house}, a public house, or inn, which is open at
night.
{Night key}, a key for unfastening a night latch.
{Night latch}, a kind of latch for a door, which is operated
from the outside by a key.
{Night monkey} (Zo["o]l.), an owl monkey.
{night moth} (Zo["o]l.), any one of the noctuids.
{Night parrot} (Zo["o]l.), the kakapo.
{Night piece}, a painting representing some night scene, as a
moonlight effect, or the like.
{Night rail}, a loose robe, or garment, worn either as a
nightgown, or over the dress at night, or in sickness.
[Obs.]
{Night raven} (Zo["o]l.), a bird of ill omen that cries in
the night; esp., the bittern.
{Night rule}.
(a) A tumult, or frolic, in the night; -- as if a
corruption, of night revel. [Obs.]
(b) Such conduct as generally rules, or prevails, at
night.
What night rule now about this haunted grove?
--Shak.
{Night sight}. (Med.) See {Nyctolopia}.
{Night snap}, a night thief. [Cant] --Beau. & Fl.
{Night soil}, human excrement; -- so called because in cities
it is collected by night and carried away for manure.
{Night spell}, a charm against accidents at night.
{Night swallow} (Zo["o]l.), the nightjar.
{Night walk}, a walk in the evening or night.
{Night walker}.
(a) One who walks in his sleep; a somnambulist; a
noctambulist.
(b) One who roves about in the night for evil purposes;
specifically, a prostitute who walks the streets.
{Night walking}.
(a) Walking in one's sleep; somnambulism; noctambulism.
(b) Walking the streets at night with evil designs.
{Night warbler} (Zo["o]l.), the sedge warbler ({Acrocephalus
phragmitis}); -- called also {night singer}. [prov. Eng.]
{Night watch}.
(a) A period in the night, as distinguished by the change
of watch.
(b) A watch, or guard, to aford protection in the night.
{Night watcher}, one who watches in the night; especially,
one who watches with evil designs.
{Night witch}. Same as {Night hag}, above.
Parrot \Par"rot\, n. [Prob. fr. F. Pierrot, dim. of Pierre
Peter. F. pierrot is also the name of the sparrow. Cf.
{Paroquet}, {Petrel}, {Petrify}.]
1. (Zo["o]l.) In a general sense, any bird of the order
{Psittaci}.
2. (Zo["o]l.) Any species of {Psittacus}, {Chrysotis},
{Pionus}, and other genera of the family {Psittacid[ae]},
as distinguished from the parrakeets, macaws, and lories.
They have a short rounded or even tail, and often a naked
space on the cheeks. The gray parrot, or jako ({P.
erithacus}) of Africa (see {Jako}), and the species of
Amazon, or green, parrots ({Chrysotis}) of America, are
examples. Many species, as cage birds, readily learn to
imitate sounds, and to repeat words and phrases.
{Carolina parrot} (Zo["o]l.), the Carolina parrakeet. See
{Parrakeet}.
{Night parrot}, or {Owl parrot}. (Zo["o]l.) See {Kakapo}.
{Parrot coal}, cannel coal; -- so called from the crackling
and chattering sound it makes in burning. [Eng. & Scot.]
{Parrot green}. (Chem.) See {Scheele's green}, under {Green},
n.
{Parrot weed} (Bot.), a suffrutescent plant ({Bocconia
frutescens}) of the Poppy family, native of the warmer
parts of America. It has very large, sinuate, pinnatifid
leaves, and small, panicled, apetalous flowers.
{Parrot wrasse}, {Parrot fish} (Zo["o]l.), any fish of the
genus {Scarus}. One species ({S. Cretensis}), found in the
Mediterranean, is esteemed by epicures, and was highly
prized by the ancient Greeks and Romans.