hey·day (hā'dā')
n. The period of greatest popularity, success, or power; prime.
c.1590, alteration of heyda (1526), exclamation of playfulness or surprise, something like Mod.Eng. hurrah, apparently an extended form of M.E. interjection hey, hei. Modern sense of "stage of greatest vigor" first recorded 1751, which altered the spelling on model of day, with which this word apparently has no etymological connection.
Greta Garbo in her heyday
Heyday: The period that maintains the greatest strength or success. The good times...
Clientele is singular: a 'grouping' term like 'flock' or 'horde' that lumps multiple individual units into a single term. So, "During its heyday, the shop's clientele was representative of the finest in high society."
a old lady
Where does the term "new digs" come fron?
Greta Garbo in her heyday
Heyday Films was created in 1997.
Heyday Books was created in 1974.
Heyday Records was created in 1988.
Heyday - The Church album - was created in 301.
Heyday: The period that maintains the greatest strength or success. The good times...
I believe the book is Heyday in the Blood. If so, the author is Geraint Goodwin.
Heyday - Fairport Convention album - was created in 1987.
The cast of Heyday - 2005 includes: Shirley Anne Field Kenny Lynch
Webster's II New Riverside Dictionary defines Heyday -- A time of maximum power, prosperity, or popularity. "HEYDAY goes back to an Anglo-Saxon use of 'hey' as an expression of great enthusiasm and happiness. So a person's 'heyday' is the period of his greatest vigor and success." From "Morris Dictionary of Word and Phrase Origins" by William and Mary Morris (HarperCollins, New York, 1977, 1988).
Clientele is singular: a 'grouping' term like 'flock' or 'horde' that lumps multiple individual units into a single term. So, "During its heyday, the shop's clientele was representative of the finest in high society."
The cast of Heyday in the Blood - 1979 includes: Gillian Elisa as Beti Donald Houston Dyfed Thomas