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All Fools' day   /ɔl fulz deɪ/   Listen
noun
All Fools' Day  n.  The first day of April, a day on which sportive impositions are practiced. "The first of April, some do say, Is set apart for All Fools' Day."






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"All fools' day" Quotes from Famous Books



... underground temples. The common people, who had for the last score of years taken shame to themselves for living under such a foolish king, embraced one another, and danced, and sang patriotic songs at every street-corner: the Lower Council met, and voted that, out of deference of his majesty, All Fools' Day should be stricken from the calendar: and Queen Pressina (one of the water folk) declared there were two ways of looking at everything, the while that she burned a quantity of private papers. Then at night were fireworks, the King made a speech, and to Manuel was ...
— Figures of Earth • James Branch Cabell



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