An American English compound referring to the middle portion of the autumn season, typically understood as late October into early November when fall foliage is at its peak and temperatures are fully settled into the cool range. It functions as both a noun (it happened in mid-fall) and an adjective (a mid-fall harvest festival). The term is common in event planning, seasonal marketing, and casual conversation about weather or schedules.
They always held the family reunion in mid-fall, when the leaves were turning and you could actually sit outside without sweating.
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(US) In the middle of fall.
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(US) The middle of fall.
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(US) Happening in the middle of fall.
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Regional slang from around the English-speaking world — British, Australian, Irish, Caribbean, Nigerian, Filipino, AAVE, and the hyphenated-English dialects that make the internet sound local.
See all Regional & Other slang on Slangora.