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Memorial Day

[muh-mawr-ee-uhl dey]

noun

  1. a day set aside in the U.S. to honor the men and women who died while serving in the U.S. military: now officially observed on the last Monday in May.

  2. any of several days, as April 26, May 10, or June 3, similarly observed in various Southern states.



Memorial Day

noun

  1. a holiday in the United States, May 30th in most states, commemorating the servicemen killed in all American wars

“Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged” 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012
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Word History and Origins

Origin of Memorial Day1

An Americanism dating back to 1865–70
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Example Sentences

Examples have not been reviewed.

The city reported NO shootings on the Sunday of the Memorial Day weekend.

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Situated about 17 miles north of Weaverville, the campground has potable water available from Memorial Day to Oct.

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Fehlbaum did say, however, that they’ve collected signatures in 82 of Ohio’s 88 counties — blowing one of the requirements out of the water — and saw huge returns from Memorial Day weekend.

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People drive from neighboring towns and beyond for it, and everyone I know, myself included, stays half drunk on it from Memorial Day to mid-July.

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But Disney's latest release, Lilo & Stitch, broke box office records in the US for the Memorial Day holiday weekend.

From

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When To Use

is Memorial Day?

Memorial Day is a U.S. national holiday held to honor those who died while serving in the military. The word memorial is a noun that means “something designed to preserve the memory of a person, event, etc., as a monument or a holiday.” It’s also an adjective, meaning “preserving the memory of a person or thing; commemorative.”Memorial Day is a federal holiday, resulting in a three-day weekend, called Memorial Day weekend. In the U.S., Memorial Day and Memorial Day weekend are popularly considered the unofficial start of summer. (Labor Day, the first Monday in September, is considered the unofficial end of summer.) Memorial Day is often celebrated with parades and informal gatherings with family and friends, such as backyard barbecues.Where does Memorial Day come from?Several cities claim to have held the first Memorial Day either during the Civil War or in the wake of it. In October 1864, a group of women in Boalsburg, Pennsylvania, decorated the graves of fallen soldiers with flowers. In April 1865, a group of Black people, mostly former slaves, moved over 200 bodies of Union soldiers that had been buried in a mass grave into individual graves. On May 1, 1865, a parade of over 10,000 people was held to honor those who died and to commemorate the end of the war.In the following years, many other communities through the U.S. held similar ceremonies. Waterloo, New York held an annual community-wide event from 1866 on, leading the town to be recognized as the birthplace of Memorial Day by the federal government in 1966. That same year, the Grand Army of the Republic, a Union veterans group, recorded that many of its state groups observed what they called a Memorial Day.In 1868, General John A. Logan, a member of the Grand Army of the Republic, proposed holding a national ceremony on May 30th. The event, held at Arlington National Cemetery, was called Decoration Day after the tradition of decorating soldiers’ graves with flowers. The date was chosen, in part, because it didn’t correspond with any specific battle.New York made Decoration Day a state holiday in 1873, changing the official name to Memorial Day in 1889. In 1888, Decoration Day was made a holiday for federal employees. By 1890, all the Union states had adopted Decoration Day or Memorial Day as a state holiday.Southern states tended to observe their own rites on different dates, and several Southern states currently recognize a Confederate Memorial Day in addition to the national holiday.Following World War I, Memorial Day was held to honor all those who died while serving in the military, not just those lost in the Civil War.In 1950, Congress passed a joint resolution, signed by President Truman, “proclaiming Memorial Day, Tuesday, May 30, 1950, and each succeeding Memorial Day, as a day of prayer for permanent peace.”The National Holiday Act, passed in 1968 and put into effect in 1971, changed the date of Memorial Day from May 30th, to the last Monday of May, and made Memorial Day a national holiday.The long weekend is often considered the unofficial start of summer, and is often celebrated with parties and barbecues. Some feel that the long weekend has detracted from the holiday’s somber purpose. In 1972, Time called the long weekend “a three-day nationwide hootenanny that seems to have lost much of its original purpose.” Late Hawaiian Senator and World War II veteran Daniel Inouye introduced legislation to move Memorial Day back to May 30, beginning in the late 1980s, and continued to pursue the change through the remainder of his life.People used the day for celebration or leisure almost from its beginning, though. An 1883 Cincinnati Enquirer headline asked: “Is Memorial Day To Be Desecrated By Holiday Sports?”In 2000, Congress passed a resolution, signed by President Clinton, urging Americans to set aside 3pm on Memorial Day “to observe a National Moment of Remembrance to honor the men and women of the United States who died in the pursuit of freedom and peace.”Learn more about the history of Memorial Day at the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs.

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