Definitions
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Etymologies
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Examples
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I know that perhaps the news cycle slows over the holidays, and that your staff feels the need to find familiar old crap to fill the gaps in the 24-hour news day This Just In: Daylight Saving Time sucks!
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Daylight Saving Time comes this Sunday at 2: 00 a.m.
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To “any reasonable person” this should come as no surprise, she says, because Daylight Saving Time was started almost a month early this year.
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Well, most of us got an extra hour sleep last night, thanks to the end of Daylight Saving Time, some unlucky folks might have actually lost two hours of sleep.
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I mean, we're talking dollars by moving Daylight Saving Time.
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Of course, they never did like Daylight Saving Time.
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Department of Transportation -- which has jurisdiction over Daylight Saving Time in the U.S. -- studied the results of the experiment.
Archive 2005-04-01 2005
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And except for the months of November through February, Daylight Saving Time does not increase the morning hazard for those going to school and work.
Archive 2005-04-01 2005
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So they aren't exactly bowled over by the prospect of an extra four weeks of Daylight Saving Time.
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In 1974, Daylight Saving Time lasted ten months and lasted for eight months in 1975, rather than the normal six months then, May to October.
Archive 2005-04-01 2005
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