The Daily Journal Archives: Flat River Missouri History

daily (adj.) Old English dæglic (see day). This form is known from compounds: twadæglic “happening once in two days,” þreodæglic “happening once in three days;” the more usual Old …

0 There's nothing wrong with using weekly, monthly, daily or using once a [week/month/day]. For example using: To get booked into a daily service. We provide daily services. …

The Daily Journal Archives: Flat River Missouri History 2

"Hourly," "daily," "monthly," "weekly," and "yearly" suggest a consistent approach to creating adverbial forms of time measurements, but the form breaks down both in smaller time units …

I am looking for a word which would apply to the groupings of periods of time, for example: Daily, Weekly, Bi-Weekly, Monthly, Annually etc For example, "this task happens daily" …

The Daily Journal Archives: Flat River Missouri History 4

Semi- is half, so semi-daily means on the half-days. The OED says it means twice a day, which is the same thing.

Why “daily” and not “dayly”? - English Language & Usage Stack ...

single word requests - Weekly, Daily, Hourly --- Minutely...? - English ...

The Daily Journal Archives: Flat River Missouri History 7