equinox means one of two times in the year (one in March and the other in September) when the length of the day and the night are equal, which occurs when the sun is directly overhead at the equator; this marks the beginning of spring in one hemisphere and autumn in the other.
equinox is pronounced /ˈɛkwɪnɒks/.
Why “equinox” is a great word
The precise astronomical moment, occurring twice each year, when the sun aligns directly above the Earth’s equator, granting equal measure to day and night across the globe. From Latin *aequinoctium*, from *aequus* ("equal") + *nox* ("night"). Unlike "solstice" (which marks an extreme of solar declination, stretching the day to its longest or shortest) or "evennight" (the obsolete Old English *efnniht*, abandoned for Latinate precision), equinox is a fleeting hinge of perfect equipoise. It is the crisp, level light of late September that sharpens every edge; the palpable, suspended breath in March before the surge of growth; the moment when shadow and illumination hold hands at every longitude—a brief, global truce between light and dark, soon undone by the turning.
Etymology
From Middle English equinox, equinoxe, equynox (“one of the two periods in the year when the day and night are of equal length, equinox; either the zodiac sign Aries or Libra, in which the sun crosses the celestial equator”), from Old French equinoce, equinoxe (modern French équinoxe), or from its etymon Medieval Latin ēquinoxium, ēquinoctium, from Latin aequinoctium (“equinox”), from aequus (“equal”) + nox (“night”) (ultimately derived from Proto-Indo-European *nókʷts (“night”)) + -ium (suffix forming abstract nouns). The Latin word, ultimately adopted in Middle English and modern English, displaced Old English efnniht (modern English evennight). The rare alternative plural form equinoctes treats equinox as if it were a Latin word; the plural of Latin nox (“night”) is no
noun
- One of two times in the year (one in March and the other in September) when the length of the day and the night are equal, which occurs when the sun is directly overhead at the equator; this marks the beginning of spring in one hemisphere and autumn in the other.“[T]he Months of March and September, the tvvo Æquinoxes of Our year, are the moſt vvindy and tempeſtuous, the moſt unſettled and unequable of Seaſons in moſt Countries of the VVorld.”
- The circumstance of a twenty-four hour time period having the day and night of equal length.“[D]oe but ſee his vice, / Tis to his vertue, a iuſt equinox, / The one as long as th'other: […]”
- One of the two points in space where the apparent path of the Sun intersects with the equatorial plane of the Earth.
- A gale (“very strong wind”) once thought to occur more frequently around the time of an equinox (sense 1), now known to be a misconception; an equinoctial gale.“The paſſage yet vvas good, the vvind, 'tis true, / VVas ſomevvhat high, but that vvas nothing nevv, / Nor more than uſual Equinoxes blevv.”
- A celestial equator (“great circle on the celestial sphere, coincident with the plane of the Earth's equator (the equatorial plane)”); also, the Earth's equator.“[T]hey [seals] are over all the American Coaſt of the South Seas, from Terra del Fuego, up to the Equinoctial Line: but to the North of the Equinox again, in theſe Sea, I never ſavv any, till as far as 21 North Lat[itude].”
Words closest in meaning
By meaning, not spelling — each word's AI semantic fingerprint, nearest first.