midwintermid‧win‧ter /ˌmɪdˈwɪntə◂ $ -ər/ noun [uncountable] - They crossed the Great Smoky Mountains in midwinter.
- Although it was midwinter now, the glade was as freshly green as the birch woods are in early summer.
- Great patches of woods can, at the height of summer, have no rnore leaves than in midwinter.
- It was, as has often been observed, a safe prediction that major operations would not take place in midwinter.
- The way the year is running we could have a drought at midwinter and snowdrops at harvest time.
- They crossed the Great Smoky Mountains in midwinter.
- They lay their eggs in midwinter, incubating their eggs and chicks through many blizzards.
nounwintermidwinteradjectivewintryverbwinter