Names of the days of the week: Difference between revisions
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|"day of the sun" | |"day of the sun" | ||
|''Sunnandæg'' | |''Sunnandæg'' | ||
|''dies Solis''; | |''dies Solis''; | ||
"day of the Lord | ''diēs Dominicus'' for "day of the Lord | ||
|dimanche | |dimanche | ||
|domingo | |domingo | ||
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(Norse father of the gods) | (Norse father of the gods) | ||
|''Wōdnesdæg'' | |''Wōdnesdæg'' | ||
|dies Mercurii | |''dies Mercurii'' | ||
Mercury = the messenger god | Mercury = the messenger god | ||
|mercredi | |mercredi |
Revision as of 21:56, 3 April 2022
Meanings and origins of the names of the days of the week
English | Literal Meaning | Old English | Latin | French | Spanish |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Sunday | "day of the sun" | Sunnandæg | dies Solis;
diēs Dominicus for "day of the Lord |
dimanche | domingo |
Monday | "day of the moon" | Mōnandæg | dies Lunae | lundi | lunes |
Tuesday | "Tiw's day"
(Anglo-Saxon god of war & combat) |
Tīwesdæg | dies Martis
(Mars = god of War) |
mardi | martes |
Wednesday | day of Woden ((also Odin)
(Norse father of the gods) |
Wōdnesdæg | dies Mercurii
Mercury = the messenger god |
mercredi | miercoles |
Thursday | "Thor's day"
(Norse god of thunder) |
Þūnresdæg ("th-")
from "Þunor " thunder" |
diēs Jovis
(Jupiter = god of thunder) |
jeudi | jueves |
Friday | "Frigga's day"
(Norse goddess of love, home, fertility) |
Frīgedæg | dies Veneris
(Venus = goddess of love) |
vendredi | viernes |
Saturday | "day of Saturn" | Sæturnesdæg
Note: in Norse, laugardagr = "washing-day" (so unrelated to the Roman or Nordic gods) |
diēs Sāturnī
Saturn = god of wealth & renewal (related to the Greek Titan, Cronus) |
samedi | sabado |
'
Sources: