Meaning
1. "the dawn."
2. "Sunrise."
3. "Heat of the day," about 9 o’clock.
4. "The two noons," (Genesis 43:16; 28:29)
5. "The cool (lit. wind) of the day," before sunset, (Genesis 3:8) --so called by the Persians to this day.
6. "Evening." Before the captivity the Jews divided the night into three watches, (Psalms 63:6; 90:4) viz. the first watch, lasting till midnight, (Lamentations 2:19) the "middle watch," lasting till cockcrow, (Judges 7:19) and the "morning watch," lasting till sunrise. (Exodus 14:24) In the New Testament we have allusions to four watches, a division borrowed from the Greeks and Romans. These were --
7. From twilight till 9 o/clock, (Mark 11:11; John 20:19)
8. Midnight, from 9 till 12 o’clock, (Mark 13:35) 3 Macc 5:23.
9. Till daybreak. (John 18:28) The word held to mean "hour" is first found in (Dan 3:6; Dan 3:15; 5:5) Perhaps the Jews, like the Greeks, learned from the Babylonians the division of the day into twelve parts. In our Lord’s time the division was common. (John 11:9)