definition
Something that is produced, consumed, used, or done every day.
definition
To drive an automobile frequently, on a daily basis, for regular and mundane tasks.
definition
That occurs every day, or at least every working day
definition
Diurnal, by daylight, as opposed to nightly
He thanked me and went about his daily business.
The next chapter will explore how far this can go, how many of our daily tasks machines could assume.
Where must she go daily that she risks herself?
There is daily steam communication (often interrupted in bad weather) with Civitavecchia from Golfo degli Aranci (the mail route), and weekly steamers run from Cagliari to Naples, Genoa (via the east coast of the island), Palermo and Tunis, and from Porto Torres to Genoa (calling at Bastia in Corsica and Leghorn) and Leghorn direct.
Normal vamps didn't need to feed daily, but he did.
Howie called in from California on a daily basis.
He was stuck with her by their laws, a daily reminder of someone who used to hurt him.
Rather than return home right away, she explored several small jewelry stores, looking for the perfect gift for Evelyn before she took her daily trip to the gym.
He had daily meetings he forbade her from attending.
The courtroom was half filled, mostly with pensioners who looked to the system for their daily entertainment.
In some tropical stations, at certain seasons of the year, thunder is almost a daily occurrence.
A little flock of these titmice came daily to pick a dinner out of my woodpile, or the crumbs at my door, with faint flitting lisping notes, like the tinkling of icicles in the grass, or else with sprightly day day day, or more rarely, in spring-like days, a wiry summery phe-be from the woodside.
She faced death on a daily basis.
They are not exhalations like our daily colloquies and vaporous breath.
The main road system, which dates from 1828, previous to which there were only tracks, is good, and the roads well engineered; many of them are traversed daily by post vehicles.
Three centuries later, it became a hereditary right and came with a daily ration of two pounds of bread ("Hey, you don't expect us to cook the free grain, do you?") and occasionally included meat, olive oil, and salt.
I felt it, and still remark it almost daily in my walks, for by it hangs the history of a family.
The next morning, she started her normal daily routine and made her way to the courtyard where she trained with the boys.
She'd forced herself to walk daily, if for no other reason than to keep her mind off the paintings and memories.
A swarm of commissioners ransacked the provinces in search of delinquents, and the council sat daily for hours, condemning the accused, almost without a hearing, in batches together.
Some time ago, when a policeman shot dead her dog, a dearly loved daily companion, she found in her forgiving heart no condemnation for the man; she only said, 'If he had only known what a good dog she was, he wouldn't have shot her.'
After May, 1890, it was evident to me that she had reached a point where it was impossible to keep from her the religious beliefs held by those with whom she was in daily contact.
He checks in daily.
He was touring the perimeter, as he did daily.
Only those who are with her daily can realize the rapid advancement which she is making in the acquisition of language.
This was one of the great days; though the sky had from my clearing only the same everlastingly great look that it wears daily, and I saw no difference in it.
Daily the beans saw me come to their rescue armed with a hoe, and thin the ranks of their enemies, filling up the trenches with weedy dead.
And it's been getting worse daily.
The wet season, during which heavy rain falls almost daily, lasts from April to October, coinciding with the south-west monsoon.
At the Union Station more than 150 trains enter and depart daily, carrying more than 30,000 passengers.
Most remarkable is the presence of a number of beetles along the seashore between tide-marks, where, sheltered in some secure nook, they undergo immersion twice daily, and have their active life confined to the few hours of the low ebb.
The technical training of the factory or the office, the experience of business, the discharge of practical duties, necessary as they are, do not infallibly open the mind to the large issues of the modern business world, and can never confer the detailed acquaintance with facts and principles which lie outside the daily routine of the individual, but are none the less of vital importance."
Among the city's daily newspapers the Boston Herald (1846), the Boston Globe, the Evening Transcript (1830), the Advertiser (1813) and the Post (1831) are the most important.
All the world, including savages who cannot count beyond five, daily "apply" theorems of number.
Alaskan mails leave the states daily, many post-offices are maintained, mail is regularly delivered beyond the Arctic circle, all the more important towns have telegraphic communication with the states,' there is one railway in the interior through Canadian territory from Skagway, and other railways are planned.
Randomized trial of prophylactic daily aspirin in British male doctors.
She'd established an internet blog devoted to the subject, with the hits increasing daily.
Betsy spotted the web site and began monitoring it daily.
The secretary-general of the Italian foreign office, Baron Blanc, who had accompanied General Cadorna to Rome, was received almost daily by Cardinal Antonelli, papal secretary of state, in order to settle innumerable questions arising out of the Italian occupation.
This afterwards declined, but it is now one of the principal points of communication between England and France, the railway company maintaining a daily service of fast steamers to Dieppe in connexion with the Chemin de fer de 1'Ouest.
Shortly afterwards, however, he retired both from parliament and from public life, professing his disgust at the party intrigues of politics, and devoted himself to conducting his newspaper, the Newcastle Daily Chronicle, and to his private business as a mine-owner.
It may happen that from a large station sufficient traffic may be consigned to certain other large stations to enable full train-loads to be made up daily, or several times a day, and despatched direct to their destinations.
The human commensals were the totem-kin, whom Robertson Smith conceived to have been in the habit of sharing a common meal in daily life, or at least of not mixing with other kins.
So eager was he to hear the words of Socrates that he used to walk daily from Peiraeus to Athens, and persuaded his friends to accompany him.
The daily and annual variation is very great, and is intensified toward the E., where the altitudes are greater.
The daily outpour of heat from the sun at the present time suggests a profound argument in support of the nebular theory.
It would take 20 tons of coal a day burned on each square foot of the sun's surface to supply the daily radiation.
In 5878 he founded a weekly economic review, La Rassegna Settimanale, which four years later he converted into a political daily journal.
Seers and prophets of all kinds ranged from those who were consulted for daily mundane affairs to those who revealed the oracles in times of stress, from those who haunted local holy sites to those high in royal favour, from the quiet domestic communities to the austere mountain recluse.
The rebels abode by their decision to stop the daily sacrifice for the emperor; Agrippa's troops capitulated and marched out unhurt; and the Romans, who surrendered on the same condition and laid down their arms, were massacred.