Someone who is appointed very late, usually for political advantage. It's most associated with the Midnight Judges Act in which John Adams attempted to keep the court Federalist in Jefferson's administration.
my appointee this suturday is iwan
An appointee is a person or thing which is appointed for a certain purpose.
That is the correct spelling of "appointee" (one who is named or chosen).
twilight
After noon, before midnight. The correct spelling is Post Meridiem.
An appointor is a person in law who selects an appointee.
Benjamin banneker
The correct spelling is appointee (a person appointed).
a political appointee
The date will change at midnight, so midnight is the start of a new day. But this is debatable and ambiguous - when people refer to midnight, they could very mean the end of the day - 24:00 rather than 00:00 "The party starts tomorrow at midnight" could very likely be meant and understood as (it starts tomorrow in the late evening, just after 23:59, or just after 11:59pm)
A phenomena in the arctic circle where there is no sunset from April to August, which Serling used as a name for the Twilight Zone episode.
Nothing, well it took me awhile to find out what monster meant I learnt the seasons fast