of, done, occurring, or issued each day or each weekday: daily attendance; a daily newspaper.
computed or measured by the day: daily quota; a daily wage.
noun,pluraldai·lies.
a newspaper appearing each day or each weekday.
dailies,Movies. a series of hastily printed shots from the previous day's shooting, selected by the director to be viewed for possible inclusion in the final version of the film; rushes.
British.
a nonresident servant who comes to work every day; a permanently employed servant who sleeps out.
a person employed to do cleaning or other household work by the day.
adverb
every day; day by day: She phoned the hospital daily.
Origin of daily
before 1000; late Middle English; Old English dæglīc.See day, -ly
When it launched last fall, Tinder’s monthly usage was climbing, but users were opening the app less on a daily basis.
Tinder’s interactive video event ‘Swipe Night’ will launch in international markets this month|Catherine Shu|September 4, 2020|TechCrunch
The Nihon Keizai Shimbun, Japan’s leading business daily, detailed Suga’s daily routine in a profile published last year.
How the son of strawberry pickers became Japan’s most likely choice for next prime minister|claychandler|September 3, 2020|Fortune
Most of us quickly scarf down a salad to maximize our daily output.
Eight ways that taking a real lunch break can improve your work (and life)|By Quinn Fish/Working Mother|September 1, 2020|Popular Science
The first week of school in the district is now just a daily check-in online with students to help them navigate the new remote learning reality and give teachers more time to prepare.
Team Reopen: 2, Schools: 0|Scott Lewis|August 31, 2020|Voice of San Diego
Frederiksen, the Danish leader, posted a clip of herself singing Danish pop songs while doing the dishes, injecting much-needed humor into the grim diet of daily news.
Why female leaders are faring better than ‘wartime presidents’ against COVID-19|matthewheimer|August 20, 2020|Fortune
Despite the strong language, however, the neither the JPO nor Lockheed could dispute a single fact in either Daily Beast report.
Pentagon Misfires in Stealth Jet Scandal|Dave Majumdar|January 8, 2015|DAILY BEAST
“We talked about the science the whole time the other day,” Krauss told The Daily Beast in a phone interview.
Sleazy Billionaire’s Double Life Featured Beach Parties With Stephen Hawking|M.L. Nestel|January 8, 2015|DAILY BEAST
As part of that effort, Said received weapons training for months, sources told The Daily Beast.
U.S. Spies See Al Qaeda Fingerprints on Paris Massacre|Shane Harris, Nancy A. Youssef|January 8, 2015|DAILY BEAST
“We quietly did,” Reed previously told The Daily Beast of removing ISIS.
‘Archer’ Creator Adam Reed Spills Season 6 Secrets, From Surreal Plotlines to Life Post-ISIS|Marlow Stern|January 8, 2015|DAILY BEAST
That is why The Daily Beast stands with Charlie Hebdo and published their controversial covers in the wake of the attack.
Why We Stand With Charlie Hebdo—And You Should Too|John Avlon|January 8, 2015|DAILY BEAST
Just as Persia has its Ruths gleaning in the fields, so also Rebekah with her water pot may be seen daily.
Oriental Women|Edward Bagby Pollard
Then he would light his pipe or his cigar and take from the shelf the uppermost copy of the pile of Daily Republicans there.
From Place to Place|Irvin S. Cobb
“But insurrections are breaking out daily,” added the pharaoh.
The Pharaoh and the Priest|Alexander Glovatski
At this time there was a bad feeling among the prisoners, and they daily expected a riot.
Travels Through North America, v. 1-2|Berhard Saxe-Weimar Eisenach
That doctor who came daily, fee or no fee, to visit the sick one, was he really a good doctor?
Dust of New York|Konrad Bercovici
British Dictionary definitions for daily
daily
/ (ˈdeɪlɪ) /
adjective
of or occurring every day or every weekdaya daily paper
earn one's daily breadto earn one's living
the daily roundthe usual activities of one's day
nounplural-lies
a daily publication, esp a newspaper
Also called: daily helpBritish another name for a charwoman
regularly, often, periodic, constantly, regular, routine, everyday, day-to-day, ordinary, commonplace, common, day after day, per diem, quotidian, cyclic, circadian, day by day, diurnal