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The names of the days of the week in North Germanic languages were not calqued from Latin directly, but taken from the West Germanic names. Sunday: Old English Sunnandæg (pronounced [ˈsunnɑndæj]), meaning "sun's day". This is a translation of the Latin phrase diēs Sōlis.
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User:Anak_bapak added a list of days under Javanese in Week-day_names#Starting_Sunday (Was first added as Indonesian, then changed shortly afterwards). There is a different list of Javanese days in section Week-day_names#Hindu_Gods. And also a different list Indonesian of days in section Week-day_names#Starting_Sunday. I'm hoping you could you ...
The Finnish name is keskiviikko ('middle of the week'), as is the Icelandic name: miðvikudagur, and the Faroese name: mikudagur ('mid-week day'). Some dialects of Faroese have ónsdagur, though, which shares etymology with Wednesday. Danish, Norwegian, Swedish onsdag, (Ons-dag meaning Odens dag 'Odin's day').
Download as PDF; Printable version; ... Pages in category "Days of the week" ... Days of the week * Names of the days of the week; Determination of the day of the ...
Likewise, the Modern Hebrew name for Monday is yom-sheni (יום שני). While in North America, Sunday is the first day of the week, the Geneva-based International Organization for Standardization places Monday as the first day of the week in its ISO 8601 standard. Monday is xīngqīyī (星期一) in Chinese, meaning "day one of the week".
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Quakers traditionally referred to Saturday as "Seventh Day", eschewing the "pagan" origin of the name. [17] In Scandinavian countries, Saturday is called lördag, lørdag, or laurdag, the name being derived from the old word laugr/laug (hence Icelandic name Laugardagur), meaning bath, thus Lördag equates to bath-day.