Evening is compared to a "long brown bag of years" in the poem "At Sundown", suggesting a sense of heaviness or burden associated with the passage of time and the approaching end of the day.
1.sundown - the time in the evening at which the sun begins to fall below the horizon
The Jewish day of rest, called Shabbat, starts Friday at sundown and ends Saturday at sundown.
during the week, there is no problem with sundown. but on friday evening, no work may be done after sundown. once sundown comes, it is the jews' sabbath, and they may not work until about an hour after sundown on saturday. but sunday through thursday has no problem with working after sundown
Sundown Friday until after twilight Saturday is the Jewish Sabbath. It is a day of rest and joy (all Jewish holidays run from sundown until after twilight). If the question is asking "why sundown to sundown as opposed to "midnight to midnight?", this is because God created the word evening to morning. As a result, Judaism holds that days begin when evening first starts. As Genesis 1:5 (NIV) says: 5 God called the light "day," and the darkness he called "night." And there was evening, and there was morning-the first day.
Sundown, evening, crepuscular moment, sunset are some.
Shabbat is "sabbath" i.e. the day of rest (from sundown Friday evening to sundown Saturday evening) and Shalom means "peace." So it means 'A peaceful Sabbath'. 'Shalom' means not just peace but wholeness, completeness.
dusk, night, sunset, twilight, sundown, close of day
sunset, dusk, nightfall, sundown, dimness, night, afterglow, decline, evening
Around sundown on the evening of Tuesday March 26th.
The poem "By Sundown" is a work by a fictional character in a virtual world, so there are no definitive questions or answers associated with it. The poem evokes a sense of mystery and discovery as the speaker encounters a hidden village at dusk, leaving the interpretation open to the reader's imagination.
The Holocaust
Whether or not it's celebrated, observed, or even acknowledged, the Shabbat is the seventh day, which, in Judaism, corresponds to Saturday. As in many other ancient cultures, each day in Judaism is considered to begin at sundown and end at the following sundown. Accordingly, the Shabbat begins at sundown on Friday evening and extends until sundown on Saturday evening. Those who observe it, whether in the synagogue, in their homes, or in some part of their private lives, observe it during that period of time.