Noon wasn't always at 12 p.m.

Noon" and "midnight" are tidy designations of time, both marking the point when an analog clock starts another 12-hour cycle. But the word "noon" took a little bit of a journey around the clock before arriving at its current location.

Noon used to be around 3 p.m.

World History

"N oon" and "midnight" are tidy designations of time, both marking the point when an analog clock starts another 12-hour cycle. But the word "noon" took a little bit of a journey around the clock before arriving at its current location.

The root of the word "noon" is the Latin nonus, meaning "ninth," which became nōn in Old English and Middle English. The word marked the ninth hour after sunrise. This made "noon" a bit of a moving target, but a 6 a.m. sunrise, for instance, would put noon around 3 p.m.

It may have been fasting monks that caused noon to shift earlier in the day. The ninth hour is significant in Christian liturgy as time set aside for prayer, known as nones, and it was particularly important in early monastic traditions. Because monks were often required to fast until then, one prevailing theory as to why the ninth-hour prayer started drifting earlier is that people were getting hungry. The Roman Catholic canonical hour of nones remained at 3 p.m., but by the 14th century, "noon" referred to a new time of day, when the sun was highest in the sky.

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By the Numbers

Year the word "afternoon" came into use

~1330

Year the word "forenoon" came into use

~1511

Canonical hours in Catholic musical tradition

8

Hours in a year

8,760

Did you know?

"Noonmeat" is a word for an afternoon meal.

The word "noon" is a building block for many English words, including "afternoon" and "noontide." It also brought us "noonmeat," which means "a noontime meal." The compound word dates back to Old English, so it predates not only the word "afternoon" but also the concept of noon as we know it. While "noonmeat" slipped mostly into obscurity, it lives on in parts of Britain as "nummit," referring to a light snack eaten between meals.

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