homecoming
English
Etymology
From Middle English hom-comyng, home komyng, home-cumyng, home-commynge, equivalent to home + coming. Probably an alteration of earlier Middle English hom-come, homkome, hame-come, ham-cume, from Old English hāmcyme (“homecoming; return”).
Pronunciation
- (General American) IPA(key): /ˈhoʊmˌkʌmɪŋ/
Noun
homecoming (plural homecomings)
- The act or event of returning home.
- His homecoming was saddened by the news of his mother's death the day before.
- (Canada, US, also attributive) In colleges and high schools, a tradition centred around a football game, a parade and the "coronation" of a Homecoming Queen.
- Synonym: hoco
- Many alumni come back for homecoming, and many freshmen are advised to flee.
- homecoming ball
- homecoming game
- homecoming party
- homecoming rave
- Ellipsis of harvest homecoming.; A traditional (street) party and/or dance near the start of the school year, at around fall mid-terms. Traditionally marking the start of harvest break, where students go home in autumn to harvest the crops on the family farms.
Derived terms
Translations
the act of returning home
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tradition in colleges and highschools
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Further reading
- homecoming on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
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