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Origin and history of sundown
Entries linking to sundown
"in a descending direction, from a higher to a lower place, degree, or condition," late Old English shortened form of Old English ofdune "downwards," originally of dune "off from (the) hill," from dune "from the hill," dative of dun "hill" (see down (n.2)). The "hill" word is general in Germanic, but this sense development is peculiar to English. As a preposition, "in a descending direction upon or along," from late 14c.
To be down on "express disapproval of" is by 1851. Down home is from 1828 as "in one's home region," as an adjective phrase meaning "unpretentious" by 1931, American English. Down the hatch as a toast is from 1931. Down to the wire is 1901, from horse-racing.
Down Under "Australia and New Zealand" attested from 1886; Down East "Maine" is from 1825; Down South "in the Southern states of the U.S." is attested by 1834. Down the road "in the future" is by 1964, U.S. colloquial. Down-to-earth "everyday, ordinary, realistic" is by 1932.
"the sun as a heavenly body or planet; daylight; the rays of the sun, sunlight," also the sun as a god or object of worship; Middle English sonne, from Old English sunne "the sun," from Proto-Germanic *sunno (source also of Old Norse, Old Saxon, Old High German sunna, Middle Dutch sonne, Dutch zon, German Sonne, Gothic sunno "the sun"), from PIE *s(u)wen-, an alternative form of root *sawel- "the sun."
Old English sunne was fem. (as generally in Germanic), and the fem. pronoun was used in English until 16c.; since then masc. has prevailed, "without necessarily implying personification" [OED].
Under the sun for "anywhere in the world" is by c. 1200 (late Old English had under sunnan). The empire on which the sun never sets (1630) originally was the Spanish, later the British. To have one's place in the sun (1680s) is first in English in a translation of Pascal's "Pensées"; the German imperial foreign policy sense (1897) is from a speech by von Bülow. When the sun is over the foreyard is "noon" at sea, the traditional time of the first serving of the day's first drink.
"apparent descent of the sun below the horizon in evening," late 14c., from sun (n.) + set (v.). Perhaps a shortening of sun-setting, or perhaps taken from a Middle English subjunctive such as before the sun set. Old English had sunnansetlgong "sunset," while sunset meant "west."
Figurative use from c. 1600. To ride off into the sunset (1963) is from a stereotypical ending of Westerns or romance films.
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