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Noon.
Noon is PM, midnight is AM.
There is no such time as 12 am. am stands for "before noon" and before noon cannot be noon.
pm is to after noon i guess * * * * * Correct! The Latin origins for the abbreviations are ante meridiem (before noon) and post meridiem (afetr noon).
The opposite of midnight is midday, or noon(local).
Midnight
Midnight.
Daytime and noon are examples.
Yes.
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Nouns dont really have "opposites" but Sunshine and Total darkness are both unlike "moonlight"
An Anti-Meridian is a meridian opposite any given meridian of longitude.Specifically the Anti-Meridian is the 180th meridian. That is the meridian opposite of the Prime Meridian.The term Anti-Meridian is sometimes confused with Ante Meridiem.Ante Meridiem is latin for before noon. Usually shown in English as "a.m.". Similarly, post meridiem, after noon, is shown in English as "p.m.".
At full moon - that's when the Moon is opposite to the Sun in the sky.
Technically, no, it's not strictly speaking true. However, you're unlikely to ever be in a place where it could be visible at noon. The full moon is always on the opposite side of the Earth from the Sun, meaning that in order to see it at noon, you'd have to be near one of the poles.
The sun is closest to directly overhead at noon, making it more attracted to that time. At midnight, the sun is on the opposite side of the Earth, so it is not visible and therefore not attracting anything.
During the equinoxes, when the Sun is at its highest, it will be at a distance from the zenith which is the same as your geographical latitude, but in the opposite direction. For example, if you live 50 degrees north of the equator, the Sun will be 50 degrees south of the zenith at noon.