heyday: [16] Etymologically, the -day of heyday has no connection with the English noun day, although it has come to resemble it over the centuries. Nor is hey- related to hay. Originally the word was heyda, an exclamation roughly equivalent to modern English hurrah. Probably it was just an extension of hey, modelled partly on Low German heida ‘hurrah’. Its earliest noun use (first recorded in the 1590s) was in the sense ‘state of exultation’; the influence of the day-like second syllable did not make itself felt until the mid-18th century, when the modern sense ‘period of greatest success’ began to emerge.
heyday (n.)
late 16c., alteration of heyda (1520s), exclamation of playfulness or surprise, something like Modern English hurrah, apparently an extended form of Middle English interjection hey or hei (see hey). 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.
权威例句
1. In its heyday , the company ran trains every fifteen minutes.
公司在最兴隆时期每隔十五分钟就开出一列火车。
2. By the 80 s, punk rock had really had its heyday.
到了20世纪80年代, 朋克摇滚乐已经到了全盛时期.
3. The 19 th century was the heyday of steam railways.
19世纪是蒸汽机车鼎盛的时代.
4. The rooms are furnished and recreate the atmosphere of the castle's medieval heyday.
房间都进行了布置,重新营造出该城堡中世纪全盛时期的氛围。
5. Docklands in its heyday was a major centre of industrial and commercial activity.