Names of the days of the week







Italian cameo bracelet representing the days of the week, corresponding to the planets as Roman gods: Diana as the Moon for Monday, Mars for Tuesday, Mercury for Wednesday, Jupiter for Thursday, Venus for Friday, Saturn for Saturday, and Apollo as the Sun for Sunday. Middle 19th century, Walters Art Museum


The names of the days of the week in many languages are derived from the names of the classical planets in Hellenistic astrology, which were in turn named after contemporary deities, a system introduced by the Roman Empire during Late Antiquity. In some other languages, the days are named after corresponding deities of the regional culture, either beginning with Sunday or with Monday. In the international standard ISO 8601, Monday is treated as the first day of the week.




Contents






  • 1 Days named after planets


    • 1.1 Greco-Roman tradition


      • 1.1.1 Romance languages


      • 1.1.2 Celtic languages


      • 1.1.3 Adoptions from Romance




    • 1.2 Germanic tradition


      • 1.2.1 Adoptions from Germanic




    • 1.3 Indian tradition


      • 1.3.1 South Asian languages


      • 1.3.2 Southeast Asian languages


      • 1.3.3 East Asian languages




    • 1.4 East Asian tradition




  • 2 Numbered days of the week


    • 2.1 Days numbered from Sunday


    • 2.2 Days numbered from Monday


    • 2.3 Days numbered from Saturday




  • 3 Mixing of numbering and astronomy


  • 4 See also


  • 5 Notes


    • 5.1 Sunday


    • 5.2 Monday


    • 5.3 Tuesday


    • 5.4 Wednesday


    • 5.5 Thursday


    • 5.6 Friday


    • 5.7 Saturday




  • 6 References


  • 7 Further reading





Days named after planets



Greco-Roman tradition



Between the 1st and 3rd centuries, the Roman Empire gradually replaced the eight-day Roman nundinal cycle with the seven-day week.
Our earliest evidence for this new system is a Pompeiian graffito referring to 6 February (viii idus Februarius) of the year AD 60 as dies solis ("Sunday").[1]
Another early witness is a reference to a lost treatise by Plutarch, written in about AD 100, which addressed the question of Why are the days named after the planets reckoned in a different order from the actual order?.[2]


The days were named after the planets of Hellenistic astrology, in the order Sun, Moon, Mars (Ares), Mercury (Hermes), Jupiter (Zeus), Venus (Aphrodite) and Saturn (Cronos).[3]


The seven-day week spread throughout the Roman Empire in Late Antiquity.
By the 4th century, it was in wide use throughout the Empire, and it had also reached India and China.


The Greek and Latin names are as follows:

































Day:
(see Irregularities)

Sunday
Sōl or Helios
(Sun)

Monday
Luna or Selene
(Moon)

Tuesday
Mars or Ares
(Mars)

Wednesday
Mercurius or Hermes
(Mercury)

Thursday
Iuppiter or Zeus
(Jupiter)

Friday
Venus or Aphrodite
(Venus)

Saturday
Saturnus or Kronos
(Saturn)

Greek

ἡμέρᾱ Ἡλίου
hēmérā Hēlíou

ἡμέρᾱ Σελήνης
hēmérā Selḗnēs

ἡμέρᾱ Ἄρεως
hēmérā Áreōs

ἡμέρᾱ Ἑρμοῦ
hēmérā Hermoû

ἡμέρᾱ Διός
hēmérā Diós

ἡμέρᾱ Ἀφροδῑ́της
hēmérā Aphrodī́tēs

ἡμέρᾱ Κρόνου
hēmérā Krónou

Latin

diēs Sōlis

diēs Lūnae

diēs Mārtis

diēs Mercuriī

diēs Iovis

diēs Veneris

diēs Saturnī


Romance languages


Except for modern Portuguese and Mirandese, the Romance languages preserved the Latin names, except for the names of Sunday, which was replaced by [dies] Dominicus (Dominica), i.e. "the Lord's Day" and of Saturday, which was named for the Sabbath. In Corsican, the Saturday is known either by Sabatu or De Sadorn.

































































































































































































Day:
(see Irregularities)

Sunday
Sōl (Sun)

Monday
Luna (Moon)

Tuesday
Mars (Mars)

Wednesday
Mercurius (Mercury)

Thursday
Iuppiter (Jupiter)

Friday
Venus (Venus)

Saturday
Saturnus (Saturn)

Italian

domenica [☉1]

lunedì

martedì

mercoledì

giovedì

venerdì

sabato [♄1]

Old Portuguese

domingo [☉1]
lues
martes
mércores
joves
vernes

sábado [♄1]

Galician

domingo [☉1]

luns

martes

mércores

xoves

venres

sábado [♄1]

Spanish

domingo [☉1]

lunes

martes

miércoles

jueves

viernes

sábado [♄1]

Romanian

duminică [☉1]

luni

marți

miercuri

joi

vineri

sâmbătă [♄1]

French

dimanche [☉1]

lundi

mardi

mercredi

jeudi

vendredi

samedi [♄1]

Occitan

dimenge [☉1]

diluns

dimarts

dimècres

dijòus

divendres

dissabte [♄1]

Catalan

diumenge [☉1]

dilluns

dimarts

dimecres

dijous

divendres

dissabte [♄1]

Asturian

domingu [☉1]

llunes

martes

miércoles

xueves

vienres

sábadu [♄1]

Lombard (Milanese)

domenega [☉1]
lunedì
martedì
mercoldì
giovedì
venerdì
sabet [♄1]

Lombard (Bresciano)
duminica [☉1]
lunedé
martedé
mercoldé
gioedé
venerdé
sabot [♄1]

Ligurian

doménga [☉1]
lunedì
mâtesdì
mâcordì
zéuggia
venardì
sàbbo [♄1]

Venetian

domenega [☉1]

luni

marti

mèrcore

zobia

vénare

sabo [♄1]

Friulian

domenie [☉1]

lunis

martars

miercus

joibe

vinars

sabide [♄1]

Neapolitan
dummeneca [☉1]
lunnerì
marterì
miercurì
gioverì
viernarì
sàbbatu [♄1]

Sardinian
dominiga [☉1]
lunis
martis
mercuris
iobia
chenabura
Sappadu [♄1]

Sicilian

dumínica [☉1]

luni

marti

mércuri

juvi

vénniri

sábbatu [♄1]

Corsican

dumenica

luni

marti

màrcuri

ghjovi

vènnari

sàbatu or sadorn


Celtic languages


Early Old Irish adopted the names from Latin, but introduced separate terms of Norse origin for Wednesday, Thursday and Friday, then later supplanted these with terms relating to church fasting practices.





























































































Day:
(see Irregularities)

Sunday
Sōl (Sun)

Monday
Luna (Moon)

Tuesday
Mars (Mars)

Wednesday
Mercurius (Mercury)

Thursday
Iuppiter (Jupiter)

Friday
Venus (Venus)

Saturday
Saturnus (Saturn)

Old Irish[4]

Diu[5]srol
Dies scrol[6]

Diu luna[7]

Diu mart[8]

Diu iath[9]

Diu eathamon[10]

Diu triach[11]

Diu saturn

Old Irish (later)

Diu domnica

Diu luna

Diu mart

Diu cétaín [☿2]

Diu eter dib aínib [♃1]

Diu aíne [♀1]

Diu saturn

Irish

An Domhnach [☉1]
Dé Domhnaigh

An Luan
Dé Luain

An Mháirt
Dé Máirt

An Chéadaoin [☿2]
Dé Céadaoin

An Déardaoin [♃1]
Déardaoin

An Aoine [♀1]
Dé hAoine

An Satharn
Dé Sathairn

Scottish Gaelic

Di-Dòmhnaich / Didòmhnaich [☉1]

Di-Luain / Diluain

Di-Màirt / Dimàirt

Di-Ciadain / Diciadain [☿2]

Di-Ardaoin / Diardaoin [♃1]

Di-hAoine / Dihaoine [♀1]

Di-Sàthairne / Disathairne

Welsh

dydd Sul

dydd Llun

dydd Mawrth

dydd Mercher

dydd Iau

dydd Gwener

dydd Sadwrn

Cornish

Dy' Sul

Dy' Lun

Dy' Meurth

Dy' Mergher

Dy' Yow

Dy' Gwener

Dy' Sadorn

Breton

Disul

Dilun

Dimeurzh

Dimerc’her

Diriaou

Digwener

Disadorn

Manx

Jedoonee [☉1]

Jelune

Jemayrt

Jecrean [☿2]

Jerdein [♃1]

Jeheiney [♀1]

Jesarn


Adoptions from Romance


Albanian adopted the Latin terms for Tuesday, Wednesday and Saturday, adopted translations of the Latin terms for Sunday and Monday, and kept native terms for Thursday and Friday. Other languages adopted the week together with the Latin (Romance) names for the days of the week in the colonial period. Some constructed languages also adopted the Latin terminology.



















































































Day:
(see Irregularities)

Sunday
Sōl (Sun)

Monday
Luna (Moon)

Tuesday
Mars (Mars)

Wednesday
Mercurius (Mercury)

Thursday
Iuppiter (Jupiter)

Friday
Venus (Venus)

Saturday
Saturnus (Saturn)

Albanian

E diel

E hënë

E martë

E mërkurë

E enjte

E premte

E shtunë

Filipino
Linggó [☉1]
Domínggo in most other Philippine languages
Lúnes
Mártes
Miyérkules
Huwebes or colloquially Webes
Biyernes
Sábado [♄1]

Chamorro
Damenggo
Lunes
Mattes
Metkoles
Huebes
Betnes
Sabalu

Māori[12]
[Rā Tapu] [not celestially named] (rā + tapu = "holy day")
Rāhina (rā + Māhina = day + Moon)
Rātū (rā + Tūmatauenga = day + Mars)
Rāapa (rā + Apārangi = day + Mercury)
Rāpare (rā + Pareārau = day + Jupiter)
Rāmere (rā + Mere = day + Venus)
[Rā Horoi] [not celestially named] (rā + horoi = "washing day")

Interlingua

Dominica [☉1]

Lunedi

Martedi

Mercuridi

Jovedi

Venerdi

Sabbato [♄1]

Ido

Sundio

Lundio

Mardio

Merkurdio

Jovdio

Venerdio

Saturdio

Esperanto

dimanĉo [☉1]

lundo

mardo

merkredo

ĵaŭdo

vendredo

sabato [♄1]


Germanic tradition



The Germanic peoples adapted the system introduced by the Romans by substituting the Germanic deities for the Roman ones (with the exception of Saturday) in a process known as interpretatio germanica.
The date of the introduction of this system is not known exactly, but it must have happened later than AD 200 but before the introduction of Christianity during the 6th to 7th centuries, i.e., during the final phase or soon after the collapse of the Western Roman Empire.[13] This period is later than the Common Germanic stage, but still during the phase of undifferentiated West Germanic. 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 dies Solis. English, like most of the Germanic languages, preserves the day's association with the sun. Many other European languages, including all of the Romance languages, have changed its name to the equivalent of "the Lord's day" (based on Ecclesiastical Latin dies Dominica). In both West Germanic and North Germanic mythology, the Sun is personified as Sunna/Sól.


  • Monday: Old English Mōnandæg (pronounced [ˈmoːnɑndæj]), meaning "Moon's day". This is equivalent to the Latin name dies lunae. In North Germanic mythology, the Moon is personified as Máni.


  • Tuesday: Old English Tīwesdæg (pronounced [ˈtiːwezdæj]), meaning "Tiw's day". Tiw (Norse Týr) was a one-handed god associated with single combat and pledges in Norse mythology and also attested prominently in wider Germanic paganism. The name of the day is also related to the Latin name dies Martis, "Day of Mars".


  • Wednesday: Old English Wōdnesdæg (pronounced [ˈwoːdnezdæj]) meaning the day of the Germanic god Woden (known as Óðinn among the North Germanic peoples), and a prominent god of the Anglo-Saxons (and other Germanic peoples) in England until about the seventh century. It is also vaguely related to the Latin counterpart dies Mercurii, "Day of Mercury". The Icelandic Miðviku, German Mittwoch, Low German Middeweek and Finnish keskiviikko all mean mid-week.


  • Thursday: Old English Þūnresdæg (pronounced [ˈθuːnrezdæj]), meaning 'Þunor's day'. Þunor means thunder or its personification, the Norse god known in Modern English as Thor. Similarly Dutch donderdag, German Donnerstag ('thunder's day'), Finnish torstai, and Scandinavian Torsdag ('Thor's day'). Thor's day corresponds to Latin dies Iovis, "day of Jupiter".


  • Friday: Old English Frīgedæg (pronounced [ˈfriːjedæj]), meaning the day of the Anglo-Saxon goddess Fríge. The Norse name for the planet Venus was Friggjarstjarna, 'Frigg's star'. It is based on the Latin dies Veneris, "Day of Venus".


  • Saturday: named after the Roman god Saturn associated with the Titan Cronus, father of Zeus and many Olympians. Its original Anglo-Saxon rendering was Sæturnesdæg (pronounced [ˈsæturnezdæj]). In Latin, it was dies Saturni, "Day of Saturn". The Scandinavian Lørdag/Lördag deviates significantly as it has no reference to either the Norse or the Roman pantheon; it derives from old Norse laugardagr, literally "washing-day". The German Sonnabend (mainly used in northern and eastern Germany) and the Low German words Sünnavend mean "Sunday Eve", the German word Samstag (mainly used in southern and western Germany) derives from the name for Shabbat.































































































































































































































Day:
(see Irregularities)

Sunday
Sunna/Sól

Monday
Mona/Máni

Tuesday
Tiw/Tyr

Wednesday
Woden/Odin

Thursday
Thunor/Thor

Friday
Frige or Freya

Saturday
Saturn

Proto-Germanic
*Sunnōniz dagaz
*Mēniniz dagaz
*Tīwas dagaz, *Þingsas dagaz [♂1]
*Wōdanas dagaz
*Þunras dagaz
*Frijjōz dagaz
*Saturnas dagaz, *Laugōz dagaz [♄2]

Old English
Sunnandæg
Mōnandæg
Tīwesdæg
Wōdnesdæg
Þunresdæg
Frīgedæg
Sæternesdæg

Old Saxon
Sunnundag
*Mānundag
*Tiuwesdag, *Thingesdag [♂1]
Wōdanesdag
*Thunaresdag
Frīadag
*Sunnunāƀand [♄3], *Satarnesdag

Old High German
Sunnûntag
Mânetag
Zîestag
Wuotanestag
Donarestag
Frîjatag
Sunnûnâband [♄3], Sambaztag [♄1]

Middle Low German
Sunnedag
Manedag
Dingesdag [♂1]
Wodenesdag
Donersdag
Vrīdag
Sunnenavend [♄3], Satersdag

German

Sonntag

Montag

Dienstag [♂1], Ziestag (Alemannic German)

Mittwoch [☿1] (older Wutenstag)

Donnerstag

Freitag

Sonnabend [♄3], Samstag [♄1]

Yiddish
Zuntik – זונטיק
Montik – מאנטיק
Dinstik – דינסטיק [♂1]
Mitvokh – מיטוואך [☿1]
Donershtik – דאנערשטיק
Fraytik – פרײַטיק
Shabbes – שבת [♄1]

Scots
Saubath[♄1], Sunday
Monanday
Tysday
Wadensday
Fuirsday
Friday
Seturday

Dutch

zondag

maandag

dinsdag [♂1]

woensdag

donderdag

vrijdag

zaterdag

Afrikaans

Sondag

Maandag

Dinsdag [♂1]

Woensdag

Donderdag

Vrydag

Saterdag

Luxembourgish
Sonndeg
Méindeg
Dënschdeg [♂1]
Mëttwoch [☿1]
Donneschdeg
Freideg
Samschdeg [♄1]

West Frisian

Snein

Moandei

Tiisdei

Woansdei

Tongersdei

Freed

Sneon [♄3], Saterdei

Low Saxon
Sünndag
Maandag
Dingsdag [♂1]
Middeweek [☿1], Goonsdag (rarely Woonsdag)
Dünnerdag
Freedag
Sünnavend [♄3], Saterdag

Old Norse
sunnudagr
mánadagr
tysdagr
óðinsdagr
þórsdagr
frjádagr
laugardagr [♄2], sunnunótt [♄3]

Faroese

sunnudagur

mánadagur

týsdagur

mikudagur [☿1], ónsdagur (Suðuroy)

hósdagur/
tórsdagur (Suðuroy)

fríggjadagur

leygardagur [♄2]

Icelandic

sunnudagur

mánudagur

þriðjudagur [♂3]

miðvikudagur [☿1]

fimmtudagur [♃3]

föstudagur [♀1]

laugardagur [♄2]

Norwegian Bokmål

søndag

mandag

tirsdag

onsdag

torsdag

fredag

lørdag [♄2]

Norwegian Nynorsk

sundag/søndag

måndag

tysdag

onsdag

torsdag

fredag

laurdag [♄2]

Danish

søndag

mandag

tirsdag

onsdag

torsdag

fredag

lørdag [♄2]

Swedish

söndag

måndag

tisdag

onsdag

torsdag

fredag

lördag [♄2]

Elfdalian
sunndag
mondag
tisdag
ųosdag
tųosdag
frjådag
lovdag


Adoptions from Germanic











































Day:
(see Irregularities)

Sunday
Sunna/Sól

Monday
Mona/Máni

Tuesday
Tiw/Tyr

Wednesday
Woden/Odin

Thursday
Thunor/Thor

Friday
Frige or Freya

Saturday
Saturn

Finnish

sunnuntai

maanantai

tiistai

keskiviikko [☿1]

torstai

perjantai

lauantai [♄2]

Estonian

pühapäev [☉2]
esmaspäev
teisipäev
kolmapäev
neljapäev
reede

laupäev [♄2]

Maori (transliteration; translation)
Wiki[☉8]; Rātapu
Mane; Rāhina
Tūrei; Rātū
Wenerei; Rāapa
Tāite; Rāpare
Paraire; Rāmere
Hāterei; Rāhoroi


Indian tradition



Hindu astrology uses the concept of days under the regency of a planet under the term vāsara, the days of the week being called āditya-, soma-, maṅgala-, budha-, guru-, śukra-, and śani-vāsara. śukrá is a name of Venus (regarded as a son of Bhṛgu); guru is here a title of Bṛhaspati, and hence of Jupiter; budha "Mercury" is regarded as a son of Soma, i.e. the Moon.[14] Knowledge of Greek astrology existed since about the 2nd century BC, but references to the vāsara occur somewhat later, during the Gupta period (Yājñavalkya Smṛti, c. 3rd to 5th century), i.e. at roughly the same period the system was introduced in the Roman Empire.[citation needed]



South Asian languages





























































































































































































































































































Sunday
the Sun
(Aditya, Ravi)

Monday
the Moon
(Soma, Chandra, Indu)

Tuesday
Mars
(Mangala)

Wednesday
Mercury
(Budha)

Thursday
Jupiter
(Bṛhaspati, Guru)

Friday
Venus
(Shukra)

Saturday
Saturn
(Shani)

Balti
Adeed
عدید
Tsandar
چَندار
Angaru
انگارو
Botu
بوتو
Brespod
بریس پود
Shugoru
شوگورو
Shingsher
شنگشر

Bengali
রবিবার/রোববার
Robibar/Robobar
সোমবার
Shombar
মঙ্গলবার
Monggolbar
বুধবার
Budhbar
বৃহস্পতিবার
Brihôshpotibar
শুক্রবার
Shukrobar
শনিবার
Shonibar

Bhojpuri
एतवार
Aitwār
सोमार
Somār
मंगर
Mangar
बुध
Budh
बियफे
Bi'phey
सुक्क
Sukk
सनिच्चर
Sanichchar

Burushaski
Adit
ادیت
Chandoro
چندورؤ
Angaro
نگارو
Bodo
بوڈو
Berayspat
بیرے سپاٹ
Shukuro
شوک ورؤ
Shemshayr
شیم شےر

Chitrali
(Khowar)
Yakshambey
یک شمبے
Doshambey
دو شمبے[☽4]
Seshambey
سہ شمبے
Charshambey
چار شمبے
Pachambey
پچھمبے
Adina
آدینہ [♀3]
Shambey
شمبے

Gujarati
રવિવાર
Ravivār
સોમવાર
Somvār
મંગળવાર
Mangaḷvār
બુધવાર
Budhvār
ગુરૂવાર
Guruvār
શુક્રવાર
Shukravār
શનિવાર
Shanivār

Hindi
रविवार
Ravivār
सोमवार
Somavār
मंगलवार
Mangalavār
बुधवार
Budhavār
गुरूवार
Guruvār
शुक्रवार
Shukravār
शनिवार
Shanivār

Hindko
Atwaar
اتوار
Suwar
سؤ وار
Mungal
منگل
Bud
بدھ
Jumiraat
جمعرات
Jummah
جمعہ
Khali
خالي

Konkani
आयतार
Āytār
सोमार
Somaar
मंगळार
Mangaḷār
बुधवार
Budhavār
भीरेस्तार
Bhirestār
शुक्रार
Shukrār
शेनवार
Shenvār

Maldivian
އާދީއްތަ
Aadheettha
ހޯމަ
Homa
އަންގާރަ
Angaara
ބުދަ
Budha
ބުރާސްފަތި
Buraasfathi
ހުކުރު
Hukuru
ހޮނިހިރު
Honihiru

Marathi
रविवार
Ravivār
सोमवार
Somavār
मंगळवार
Mangaḷavār
बुधवार
Budhavār
गुरूवार
Guruvār
शुक्रवार
Shukravār
शनिवार
Shanivār

Kashmiri
Āthvār
आथु'वार اَتھ وار
Çāņdėrvār
च़'न्दु'रवार ژندر وار
Bomvār
बोमवार پم وار
Bödvār
बॅदवार برھ وار
Brêsvār
ब्रसवार برس وار
Shokụrvār / Jumāh
शो'कु'रवार شۆکٕروار
जुमाह جُمھ
Baţėvār
बटु'वार بٹ وار

Kannada
ಭಾನುವಾರ
Bhanu Vaara
ಸೋಮವಾರ
Soma Vaara
ಮಂಗಳವಾರ
Mangala Vaara
ಬುಧವಾರ
Budha Vaara
ಗುರುವಾರ
Guru Vaara
ಶುಕ್ರವಾರ
Shukra Vaara
ಶನಿವಾರ
Shani Vaara

Malayalam
ഞായര്‍
Nhāyar
തിങ്കള്‍
Tingal
ചൊവ്വ
Chovva
ബുധന്‍
Budhan
വ്യാഴം
Vyāzham
വെള്ളി
Velli
ശനി
Shani

Nepali
आइतवार
Aaitabar
सोमवार
Sombar
मंगलवार
Mangalbar
बुधवार
Budhabar
बिहिवार
Bihibar
शुक्रवार
Sukrabar
शनिवार
Sanibar

Pashto
Etwar
اتوار
Gul
ګل
Nehi
نهه
Shoro
شورو
Ziarat
زيارت
Jumma
جمعه
Khali
خالي

Punjabi
(Gurmukhi)
ਐਤਵਾਰ
etvār
ਸੋਮਵਾਰ
sōmvār
ਮੰਗਲਵਾਰ
mangalvār
ਬੁੱਧਵਾਰ
búdvār
ਵੀਰਵਾਰ
vīrvār
ਸ਼ੁੱਕਰਵਾਰ
shukkarvār
ਸ਼ਨਿੱਚਰਵਾਰ
shaniccharvār

Odia
ରବିବାର
Rabibār
ସୋମବାର
Sombār
ମଙ୍ଗଳବାର
Mangalbār
ବୁଧବାର
Buddhbār
ଗୁରୁବାର
Gurubār
ଶୁକ୍ରବାର
Shukrabār
ଶନିବାର
Shanibār

Sinhala

ඉරිදා
Irida

සඳුදා
Sanduda

අඟහරුවාදා
Angaharuwada

බදාදා
Badada

බ්‍රහස්පතින්දා
Brahaspathinda

සිකුරාදා
Sikurada

සෙනසුරාදා
Senasurada

Telugu
ఆదివారం
Aadi Vāram
సోమవారం
Soma Vāram
మంగళవారం
Mangala Vāram
బుధవారం
Budha Vāram
గురువారం
Bestha/Guru/Lakshmi Vāram
శుక్రవారం
Shukra Vāram
శనివారం
Shani Vāram

Tamil

ஞாயிறு
Gnyāyiru

திங்கள்
Thingal

செவ்வாய்
Chevvāi

புதன்
Budhan

வியாழன்
Viyāzhan

வெள்ளி
Velli

சனி
Sani

Sanskrit
भानुवासर
Bhānuvāsara
इन्दुवासर
Induvāsara
भौमवासर
Bhaumavāsara
सौम्यवासर
Saumyavāsara
गुरुवासर
Guruvāsara
भृगुवासर
Bhṛguvāsara
स्थिरवासर
Sthiravāsara

Shina
Adit
ادیت
Tsunduro
تساند ورؤ
Ungaro
نگارو
Budo
بوڈو
Brespat
بیرے سپاٹ
Shukur
شوکر
Shimsher
شیم شےر

Sindhi
Aacheru
آچر
Soomaru
سومر
Angaro
انڱارو
Arbau
اربع
Kameesa
خميس
Jum'o
جمعو
Chancher
ڇنڇر

Sylheti

ꠞꠛꠤꠛꠣꠞ
Robibar

ꠡꠝꠛꠣꠞ
Shombar

ꠝꠋꠉꠟꠛꠣꠞ
Mongolbar

ꠛꠥꠗꠛꠣꠞ
Budhbar

ꠛꠤꠡꠥꠗꠛꠣꠞ
Bishudhbar

ꠡꠥꠇ꠆ꠇꠥꠞꠛꠣꠞ/ꠎꠃꠝ꠆ꠝꠣꠛꠣꠞ
Shukkurbar/Jummabar

ꠡꠘꠤꠛꠣꠞ
Shonibar

Urdu
Itwār
اتوار
Pīr
پیر [☽4]
Mangal
منگل
Bodh
بدھ
Jumārāt
جمعرات
Jummah
جمعہ[♀4]
Heftah
ہفتہ [♄6]

Western Punjabi
(Shahmukhi)
Aitwār
اتوار
Pīr
پیر
Mangal
منگل
Budh
بدھ
Jumāy-rāt
جمعرات
Jummah
جمعہ
Hafta
ہفتہ


Southeast Asian languages


The Southeast Asian tradition also uses the Hindu names of the days of the week. Hindu astrology adopted the concept of days under the regency of a planet under the term vāra, the days of the week being called āditya-, soma-, maṅgala-, budha-, guru-, śukra-, and śani-vāra. śukrá is a name of Venus (regarded as a son of Bhṛgu); guru is here a title of Bṛhaspati, and hence of Jupiter; budha "Mercury" is regarded as a son of Soma, i.e. the Moon.[15]









































































































Sunday
the Sun
(Aditya, Ravi)

Monday
the Moon
(Soma, Chandra, Indu)

Tuesday
Mars
(Mangala)

Wednesday
Mercury
(Budha)

Thursday
Jupiter
(Bṛhaspati, Guru)

Friday
Venus
(Shukra)

Saturday
Saturn
(Shani)

Burmese

တနင်္ဂနွေ[☉9]
IPA: [tənɪ́ɴ ɡənwè]
(ta.nangga.nwe)

တနင်္လာ[☽5]
IPA: [tənɪ́ɴ là]
(ta.nangla)

အင်္ဂါ
IPA: [ɪ̀ɴ ɡà]
(Angga)

ဗုဒ္ဓဟူး
IPA: [boʊʔ dəhú]
(Buddhahu)
(afternoon=new day)
ရာဟု
Rahu

ကြာသာပတေး
IPA: [tɕà ðà bədé]
(Krasapate)

သောကြာ
IPA: [θaʊʔ tɕà]
(Saukra)

စနေ
IPA: [sənè]
(Cane)

Mon

တ္ၚဲ အဒိုတ်
[ŋoa ətɜ̀t]
from Sans. āditya

တ္ၚဲ စန်
[ŋoa cɔn]
from Sans. candra

တ္ၚဲ အၚါ
[ŋoa əŋɛ̀a]
from Sans. aṅgāra

တ္ၚဲ ဗုဒ္ဓဝါ
[ŋoa pùt-həwɛ̀a]
from Sans. budhavāra

တ္ၚဲ ဗြဴဗ္တိ
[ŋoa pɹɛ̀apətɔeʔ]
from Sans. bṛhaspati

တ္ၚဲ သိုက်.
[ŋoa sak]
from Sans. śukra

တ္ၚဲ သ္ၚိ သဝ်
[ŋoa hɔeʔ sɔ]
from Sans. śani

Khmer
ថ្ងៃអាទិត្យ
[tŋaj ʔaːtɨt]
ថ្ងៃចន្ទ
[tŋaj can]
ថ្ងៃអង្គារ
[tŋaj ʔɑŋkiə]
ថ្ងៃពុធ
[tŋaj put]
ថ្ងៃព្រហស្បត្ណិ
[tŋaj prɔhoə̯h]
ថ្ងៃសុក្រ
[tŋaj sok]
ថ្ងៃសៅរ៍
[tŋaj saʋ]

Lao
ວັນອາທິດ
[wán ʔàːtʰīt]
ວັນຈັນ
[wán càn]
ວັນອັງຄານ
[wán ʔàŋkʰáːn]
ວັນພຸດ
[wán pʰūt]
ວັນພະຫັດ
[wán pʰāhát]
ວັນສຸກ
[wán súk]
ວັນເສົາ
[wán sǎu]

Cham
Adit
Thôm
Angar
But
jip
Suk
Thanưchăn

Shan

ဝၼ်းဢႃတိတ်ႉ
IPA: [wan˦ ʔaː˩ tit˥]

ဝၼ်းၸၼ်
IPA: [wan˦ tsan˩]

ဝၼ်းဢင်းၵၼ်း
IPA: [wan˦ ʔaŋ˦ kan˦]

ဝၼ်းၽုတ်ႉ
IPA: [wan˦ pʰut˥]

ဝၼ်းၽတ်း
IPA: [wan˦ pʰat˦]

ဝၼ်းသုၵ်း
IPA: [wan˦ sʰuk˦]

ဝၼ်းသဝ်
IPA: [wan˦ sʰaw˩]

Thai
วันอาทิตย์
Wan Āthit
วันจันทร์
Wan Chan
วันอังคาร
Wan Angkhān
วันพุธ
Wan Phut
วันพฤหัสบดี
Wan Phruehatsabodi
วันศุกร์
Wan Suk
วันเสาร์
Wan Sao

Javanese
Raditya
Soma
Anggara
Buda
Respati
Sukra
Tumpek

Balinese
Redite
Soma
Anggara
Buda
Wrespati
Sukra
Saniscara


East Asian languages

























Sunday
the Sun
(Aditya, Ravi)

Monday
the Moon
(Soma, Chandra, Indu)

Tuesday
Mars
(Mangala)

Wednesday
Mercury
(Budha)

Thursday
Jupiter
(Bṛhaspati, Guru)

Friday
Venus
(Shukra)

Saturday
Saturn
(Shani)

Mongolian

адъяа
ad'yaa

сумъяа
sum'yaa

ангараг
angarag

буд
bud

бархабадь
barhabad'

сугар
sugar

санчир
sanchir


East Asian tradition


The East Asian naming system for the days of the week closely parallels that of the Latin system and is ordered after the "Seven Luminaries" (七曜 qī yào), which consists of the Sun, Moon and the five planets visible to the naked eye.


The Chinese seem to have adopted the seven-day week from the Hellenistic system by the 4th century, although by which route is not entirely clear. It was again transmitted to China in the 8th century by Manichaeans, via the country of Kang (a Central Asian polity near Samarkand).[16]
The 4th-century date, according to the Cihai encyclopedia,[year needed] is due to a reference to Fan Ning (範寧/范宁), an astrologer of the Jin Dynasty. The renewed adoption from Manichaeans in the 8th century (Tang Dynasty) is documented with the writings of the Chinese Buddhist monk Yijing and the Ceylonese Buddhist monk Bu Kong.


The Chinese transliteration of the planetary system was soon brought to Japan by the Japanese monk Kobo Daishi; surviving diaries of the Japanese statesman Fujiwara Michinaga show the seven day system in use in Heian Period Japan as early as 1007. In Japan, the seven day system was kept in use (for astrological purposes) until its promotion to a full-fledged (Western-style) calendrical basis during the Meiji era. In China, with the founding of the Republic of China in 1911, Monday through Saturday in China are now named after the luminaries implicitly with the numbers.





Pronunciations for Classical Chinese names are given in Standard Chinese.




















































































Sunday

Monday

Tuesday

Wednesday

Thursday

Friday

Saturday
Celestial Object
Sun (日)
First Star - Day
Moon (月)
Second Star - Moon
Mars (火)
Third Star - Fire
Mercury (水)
Fourth Star - Water
Jupiter (木)
Fifth Star - Wood
Venus (金)
Sixth Star - Metal or Gold
Saturn (土)
Seventh Star - Earth or Soil

Classical Chinese

日曜日
Rìyàorì

月曜日
Yuèyàorì

火曜日
Huǒyàorì

水曜日
Shuǐyàorì

木曜日
Mùyàorì

金曜日
Jīnyàorì

土曜日
Tǔyàorì

Standard Modern Chinese

星期日
Xīngqī rì

星期一
Xīngqī yī

星期二
Xīngqī èr

星期三
Xīngqī sān

星期四
Xīngqī sì

星期五
Xīngqī wǔ

星期六
Xīngqī liù

Japanese

日曜日
Nichiyōbi

月曜日
Getsuyōbi

火曜日
Kayōbi

水曜日
Suiyōbi

木曜日
Mokuyōbi

金曜日
Kin'yōbi

土曜日
Doyōbi

Korean

일요일
日曜日
Ilyoil

월요일
月曜日
Wolyoil

화요일
火曜日
Hwayoil

수요일
水曜日
Suyoil

목요일
木曜日
Mogyoil

금요일
金曜日
Geumyoil

토요일
土曜日
Toyoil

Mongolian

наран өдөр naraŋ ödör

саран өдөр saraŋ ödör

гал өдөр gal ödör

усан өдөр usaŋ ödör

модон өдөр modoŋ ödör

төмөр өдөр, алтан өдөр tömör ödör, altaŋ ödör

шороон өдөр shorooŋ ödör

Tibetan

གཟའ་ཉི་མ།
(gza' nyi ma)
Nyima

གཟའ་ཟླ་བ།
(gza' zla wa)
Dawa

གཟའ་མིག་དམར།
(gza' mig dmar)
Mikmar

གཟའ་ལྷག་པ།
(gza' lhak pa)
Lhakpa

གཟའ་ཕུར་བུ།
(gza' phur bu)
Purbu

གཟའ་པ་སངས།
(gza' pa sangs)
Pasang

གཟའ་སྤེན་པ།
(gza' spen ba)
Penba


Numbered days of the week



Days numbered from Sunday


Sunday comes first in order in calendars shown in the table below. In the Judeo-Christian or Abrahamic tradition, the first day of the week is Sunday. Biblical Sabbath (corresponding to Saturday), when God rested from six-day Creation, made the day following Sabbath the first day of the week (corresponding to Sunday). Seventh-day Sabbaths were sanctified for celebration and rest. After the week was adopted in early Christianity, Sunday remained the first day of the week, but also gradually displaced Saturday as the day of celebration and rest, being considered the Lord's Day.


Saint Martin of Dumio (c. 520–580), archbishop of Braga, decided not to call days by pagan gods and to use ecclesiastic terminology to designate them. While the custom of numbering the days of the week was mostly prevalent in the Eastern Church, Portuguese and Galician, due to Martin's influence, are the only Romance languages in which the names of the days come from numbers rather than planetary names.[17]


Icelandic is a special case within the Germanic languages, maintaining only the Sun and Moon (sunnudagur and mánudagur respectively), while dispensing with the names of the explicitly heathen gods in favour of a combination of numbered days and days whose names are linked to pious or domestic routine (föstudagur, "Fasting Day" and laugardagur, "Washing Day"). The "washing day" is also used in other North Germanic languages, but otherwise the names correspond to those of English.



























































































































































































































































































Day
Number From One

Sunday
Day One

Monday
Day Two

Tuesday
Day Three

Wednesday
Day Four

Thursday
Day Five

Friday
Day Six

Saturday
Day Seven

Icelandic

sunnudagur (Sun)

mánudagur (Moon)

þriðjudagur

miðvikudagur [☿1]

fimmtudagur

föstudagur [♀1]

laugardagur [♄2]

Faroese

sunnudagur

mánadagur

týsdagur

mikudagur

hósdagur

fríggjadagur

leygardagur

Hebrew

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ראשון
rishon


שני
sheyni


שלישי
shlishi


רביעי
revi'i


חמישי
khamishi


שישי
shishi


שבת
Shabbat[♄1]

Ecclesiastical Latin
Dominica [☉1]
feria secunda
feria tertia
feria quarta
feria quinta
feria sexta
sabbatum [♄1]

Portuguese

domingo [☉1]

segunda-feira

terça-feira

quarta-feira

quinta-feira

sexta-feira

sábado [♄1]

Galician

domingo [☉1]

segunda feira

terza feira
terceira feira

corta feira
quarta feira

quinta feira

sexta feira

sábado [♄1]

Mirandese

demingo [☉1]

segunda-feira

terça-feira

quarta-feira

quinta-feira

sesta-feira

sábado [♄1]

Tetum
loron-domingu
loron-segunda
loron-tersa
loron-kuarta
loron-kinta
loron-sesta
loron-sábadu

Greek
Κυριακή
Kyriakí [☉1]
Δευτέρα
Deftéra
Τρίτη
Tríti
Τετάρτη
Tetárti
Πέμπτη
Pémpti
Παρασκευή
Paraskeví [♀2]
Σάββατο
Sávato [♄1]

Georgian
კვირა k'vira
ორშაბათი oršabati
სამშაბათი samšabati
ოთხშაბათი otxšabati
ხუთშაბათი xutšabati
პარასკევი p'arask'evi
შაბათი šabati

Armenian
Կիրակի
Kiraki [☉1]
Երկուշաբթի
Yerkushabti
Երեքշաբթի
Yerekshabti
Չորեքշաբթի
Chorekshabti
Հինգշաբթի
Hingshabti
Ուրբաթ
Urbat
Շաբաթ
Shabat [♄1]

Vietnamese
chủ nhật (chúa nhật)
(ngày) thứ hai
(ngày) thứ ba
(ngày) thứ tư
(ngày) thứ năm
(ngày) thứ sáu
(ngày) thứ bảy

Somali
Axad
Isniin
Talaado
Arbaco
Khamiis
Jimco
Sabti

Amharic
እሑድ
əhud
ሰኞ
säñño (Next)
ማክሰኞ
maksäñño
ረቡዕ, ሮብ
räbu, rob
ሐሙስ
hamus
ዓርብ
arb (Sunset)
ቅዳሜ
ḳədame (First)

Arabic

يوم) الأحد)
(yawm) al-aḥad

يوم) الإثنين)
(yawm) al-ithnayn

يوم) الثُّلَاثاء)
(yawm) ath-thulāthā’

يوم) الأَرْبعاء)
(yawm) al-’arbi‘ā’

يوم) الخَمِيس)
(yawm) al-khamīs

يوم) الجُمْعَة)
(yawm) al-jum‘ah [♀4]

يوم) السَّبْت)
(yawm) as-sabt [♄5]

Maltese

il-Ħadd

it-Tnejn

it-Tlieta

l-Erbgħa

il-Ħamis

il-Ġimgħa [♀4]

is-Sibt [♄5]

Malay
(includes Indonesian)

Ahad (general)
Minggu[☉1](Indonesian, derived from Portuguese)

Isnin or Senin

Selasa

Rabu

K(h)amis

Juma(a)t [♀4]

Sabtu [♄5]

Javanese

Ngahad, Ngakad,
Minggu[☉1](Portuguese)

Senèn

Selasa

Rebo

Kemis

Jemuwah [♀4]

Setu [♄5]

Sundanese

Minggu / Minggon [☉1](Portuguese)

Senén

Salasa

Rebo

Kemis

Jumaah [♀4]

Saptu [♄5]

Persian

یکشنبه
yekšanbe
Mehr ruz
مهرروز

دوشنبه
došanbe
Māh ruz
ماه روز

سه شنبه
sešanbe
Bahrām ruz
بهرام روز

چهارشنبه
čāhāršanbe
Tir ruz
تیر روز

پنجشنبه
panjšanbe
Hormazd ruz
هرمزد روز

آدینه or جمعه
ādine [♀3] or djome [♀4]
Nāhid ruz
ناهید روز

شنبه
šanbe
Keyvān ruz
کیوان روز

Kazakh

Жексенбі
Jeksenbi

Дүйсенбі
Dúısenbi

Сейсенбі
Seısenbi

Сәрсенбі
Sársenbi

Бейсенбі
Beısenbi

Жұма
Juma

Сенбі
Senbi

Khowar
یک شمبے
yak shambey
دو شمبے[☽4]
du shambey
سہ شمبے
sey shambey
چار شمبے
char shambey
پچھمبے
pachhambey
آدینہ[♀3]
adina
شمبے
shambey

Kurdish

Yekşem

Duşem

Sêşem

Çarşem

Pêncşem

În

Şemî

Old Turkic
birinç kün
ikinç kün
üçünç kün
törtinç kün
beşinç kün
altınç kün
yetinç kün

Turkish

Pazar [☉4]

Pazartesi [☽2]

Salı [♂4]

Çarşamba [☿4]

Perşembe [♃4]

Cuma [♀4]

Cumartesi [♄4]

Uzbek

Yakshanba

Dushanba

Seshanba

Chorshanba

Payshanba

Juma

Shanba

Navajo

Damóo/Damíigo [☉1](Spanish)

Damóo Biiskání
Sunday has ended

Damóo dóó Naakiską́o
Sunday +2 × sunrise

Damóo dóó Tááʼ Yiką́o
Sunday +3 × sunrise

Damóo dóó Dį́į́ʼ Yiką́o
Sunday +4 × sunrise

Ndaʼiiníísh
It ends/done for the week

Yiką́o Damóo
[upon] sunrise [it is] Sunday


Days numbered from Monday


The ISO prescribes Monday as the first day of the week with ISO-8601 for software date formats.


The Slavic, Baltic and Uralic languages (except Finnish and partially Estonian) adopted numbering but took Monday rather than Sunday as the "first day".[18] This convention is also found in some Austronesian languages whose speakers were converted to Christianity by European missionaries.[19]


In Slavic languages, some of the names correspond to numerals after Sunday: compare Russian vtornik "Tuesday" and vtoroj "the following", chetverg "Thursday" and chetvertyj "the fourth", pyatnitsa "Friday" and pyatyj "the fifth"; see also the Notes.



















































































































































































































































Day
Number From One

Monday
Day One

Tuesday
Day Two

Wednesday
Day Three

Thursday
Day Four

Friday
Day Five

Saturday
Day Six

Sunday
Day Seven

ISO 8601 #
1
2
3
4
5
6
7

Russian

понедельник
ponedel'nik [☽1]

вторник
vtornik

среда
sreda [☿1]

четверг
chetverg [♃4]

пятница
pyatnitsa [♀5]

суббота
subbota [♄1]

воскресенье
voskresen'ye [☉3]

Belarusian
панядзелак
panyadzelak [☽1]
аўторак
awtorak
серада
serada [☿1]
чацвер
chats'ver [♃4]
пятніца
pyatnitsa [♀5]
субота
subota [♄1]
нядзеля
nyadzelya [☉6]

Ukrainian

понедiлок
ponedilok [☽1]

вiвторок
vivtorok

середа
sereda [☿1]

четвер
chetver [♃4]

п'ятниця
p'yatnitsya [♀5]

субота
subota [♄1]

недiля
nedilya [☉6]

Bulgarian

понеделник
ponedelnik [☽1]

вторник
vtornik

сряда
sryada [☿1]

четвъртък
chetvărtăk [♃4]

петък
petăk [♀5]

събота
săbota [♄1]

неделя
nedelya [☉6]

Polish

poniedziałek [☽1]

wtorek

środa [☿1]

czwartek [♃4]

piątek [♀5]

sobota [♄1]

niedziela [☉6]

Kashubian
pòniedzôłk
wtórk
strzoda
czwiôrtk
piątk
sobòta
niedzela

Slovak

pondelok [☽1]

utorok

streda [☿1]

štvrtok [♃4]

piatok [♀5]

sobota [♄1]

nedeľa [☉6]

Czech

pondělí or pondělek [☽1]

úterý or úterek

středa [☿1]

čtvrtek [♃4]

pátek [♀5]

sobota [♄1]

neděle [☉6]

Slovene

ponedeljek [☽1]

torek

sreda [☿1]

četrtek [♃4]

petek [♀5]

sobota [♄1]

nedelja [☉6]

Bosnian

ponedjeljak

utorak

srijeda

četvrtak [♃4]

petak [♀5]

subota

nedjelja

Croatian

ponedjeljak [☽1]

utorak

srijeda [☿1]

četvrtak [♃4]

petak [♀5]

subota [♄1]

nedjelja [☉6]

Serbian

понедељак
ponedeljak [☽1]

уторак
utorak

среда
sreda [☿1]

четвртак
četvrtak [♃4]

петак
petak [♀5]

субота
subota [♄1]

недеља
nedelja [☉6]

Macedonian

понеделник
ponedelnik [☽1]

вторник
vtornik

среда
sreda [☿1]

четврток
chetvrtok [♃4]

петок
petok [♀5]

сабота
sabota [♄1]

недела
nedela [☉6]

Lithuanian

pirmadienis

antradienis

trečiadienis

ketvirtadienis

penktadienis [♀5]

šeštadienis

sekmadienis

Latvian

pirmdiena

otrdiena

trešdiena

ceturtdiena [♃4]

piektdiena [♀5]

sestdiena

svētdiena

Hungarian

hétfő [☽3]

kedd [♂2]

szerda [☿1]Slavic

csütörtök [♃4]Slavic

péntek [♀5]Slavic

szombat [♄1]Slavic

vasárnap [☉5]

Estonian

esmaspäev

teisipäev

kolmapäev

neljapäev

reede

laupäev

pühapäev

Mongolian
(numerical)

нэг дэх өдөр
neg dekh ödör

хоёр дахь өдөр
hoyor dahi ödör

гурав дахь өдөр
gurav dahi ödör

дөрөв дэх өдөр
döröv dekh ödör

тав дахь өдөр
tav dahi ödör

хагас сайн өдөр
hagas sayn ödör [♄7]

бүтэн сайн өдөр
büten sayn ödör [☉7]

Mongolian
(Tibetan)

даваа
davaa

мягмар
myagmar

лхагва
lhagva

пүрэв
pürev

баасан
baasan

бямба
byamba

ням
nyam

Luo
Wuok tich
Tich ariyo
Tich adek
Tich ang'uen
Tich abich
Chieng' ngeso
Juma pil

Tok Pisin (Melanesian Pidgin)
mande
tunde
trinde
fonde
fraide
sarere
sande

Apma (Vanuatu)
ren bwaleh / mande[20]
ren karu
ren katsil
ren kavet
ren kalim
lesaare
sande

In Standard Chinese, the week is referred to as the cycle of the stars (Chinese: 星期; pinyin: Xīngqī). The modern Chinese names for the days of the week are based on a simple numerical sequence. The word for "week" (which is literally translated to "star day") is followed by a number indicating the day: "Monday" is literally "star day one", "Tuesday" is "star day two", etc. The exception is Sunday, where rì (日), meaning "sun" or "day", is used instead of a number.[21]























Day

Monday

Tuesday

Wednesday

Thursday

Friday

Saturday

Sunday

Standard Chinese

星期一
Xīngqīyī

星期二
Xīngqí'èr

星期三
Xīngqīsān

星期四
Xīngqīsì

星期五
Xīngqīwǔ

星期六
Xīngqīliù

星期日
Xīngqīrì


Days numbered from Saturday


In Swahili, the day begins at sunrise, unlike in the Arabic and Hebrew calendars where the day starts at sunset (therefore an offset of twelve hours), and unlike in the Western world where the day starts at midnight (therefore an offset of six hours). Saturday is therefore the first day of the week, as it is the day that includes the first night of the week in Arabic.


Etymologically speaking, Swahili has two "fifth" days. The words for Saturday through Wednesday contain the Bantu-derived Swahili words for "one" through "five". The word for Thursday, Alhamisi, is of Arabic origin and means "the fifth" (day). The word for Friday, Ijumaa, is also Arabic and means (day of) "gathering" for the Friday noon prayers in Islam.























Day
Number from One

Saturday
Day One

Sunday
Day Two

Monday
Day Three

Tuesday
Day Four

Wednesday
Day Five

Thursday
Day Six

Friday
Day Seven

Swahili[22]
jumamosi
jumapili
jumatatu
jumanne
jumatano
alhamisi [♃2]
ijumaa [♀4]


Mixing of numbering and astronomy


In the Žejane dialect of Istro-Romanian, lur (Monday) and virer (Friday) follow the Latin convention, while utorek (Tuesday), sredu (Wednesday), and četrtok (Thursday) follow the Slavic convention.[23]























Day

Monday

Tuesday

Wednesday

Thursday

Friday

Saturday

Sunday

Istro-Romanian, Žejane dialect
lur
utorek
sredu
četrtok
virer
simbota [♄1]
dumireca [☉1]

There are several systems in the different Basque dialects.[24]

































Day

Monday

Tuesday

Wednesday

Thursday

Friday

Saturday

Sunday

Standard Basque, Guipuscoan Basque
astelehena ("week-first")
asteartea ("week-between")
asteazkena ("week-last")
osteguna ("Ortzi/Sky day")
ostirala (see Ortzi)
larunbata ("fourth", "meeting of friends"), neskenegun ("girls' day")
igandea

Biscayne Basque
astelena ("week-first"), ilen ("Moon day")
martitzena ("Mars day")
eguaztena ("day last")
eguena ("day of days", "day of light")
barikua ("day without supper"), egubakotx
zapatua (compare with Spanish sábado from Sabbath)
domeka (from Latin Dominica [dies])

In Judaeo-Spanish (Ladino), which is mainly based on a medieval version of Spanish, the five days of Monday–Friday closely follow the Spanish names. Sunday uses the Arabic name, which is based on numbering, because a Jewish language was not likely to adapt a name based on "Lord's Day" for Sunday. As in Spanish, the Ladino name for Saturday is based on Sabbath. However, as a Jewish language—and with Saturday being the actual day of rest in the Jewish community—Ladino directly adapted the Hebrew name, Shabbat.[25]























Day

Sunday

Monday

Tuesday

Wednesday

Thursday

Friday

Saturday

Judaeo-Spanish (Ladino)
Alhadh
Lunes
Martes
Miércoles
Juğeves
Viernes
Shabat [♄1]


See also



  • Akan names of the seven-day week, known as Nawotwe


  • Bahá'í calendar (section Weekdays)

  • Calculating the day of the week

  • Week

  • Work Week

  • Feria



Notes



Sunday


☉1 From Latin Dominicus (Dominica) or Greek Κυριακή (Christian Sabbath)
☉2 Holy Day and First-Day of the Week (Day of the Sun -> Light -> Resurrection -> Born again) (Christianity)
☉3 Resurrection (Christianity)
☉4 Bazaar Day
☉5 Market Day
☉6 No Work
☉7 Full good day
☉8 Borrowed from English week
☉9 From an Old Burmese word, not of Indic origin.



Monday


☽1 After No Work. In Russian also "Day After Week(end)" - see понедельник
☽2 After Bazaar
☽3 Head of Week
☽4 Master (as in Pir, because Muhammad was born on a Monday[citation needed])
☽5 From an Old Burmese word, not of Indic origin.



Tuesday


♂1 Thing (Assembly), of which god Tyr/Ziu was the patron.
♂2 Second day of the week (cf. Hungarian kettő "two")
♂3 Third day of the week.
♂4 From Arabic "ath-Thalaathaaʼ" (third day)



Wednesday


☿1 Mid-week or Middle
☿2 The First Fast (Christianity)



Thursday


♃1 The day between two fasts (An Dé idir dhá aoin, contracted to An Déardaoin) (Christianity)
♃2 Five (Arabic)
♃3 Fifth day of the week.
♃4 Fourth day of the week.



Friday


♀1 The Fast (Celtic) or Fasting Day (Icelandic) (Christianity)
♀2
Good Friday or Preparation (Christianity)
♀3 Jumu'ah (Muslim Sabbath)
♀4 Gathering/Assembly/Meeting (Islam) – in Malta with no Islamic connotations
♀5 Fifth day of the week



Saturday


♄1 Shabbat (Jewish Sabbath)
♄2 Wash or Bath day
♄3 Sun-eve (Eve of Sunday)
♄4 After the Gathering (Islam)
♄5 End of the Week (Arabic Sabt = Rest)
♄6 Week
♄7 Half good day



References





  1. ^ Nerone Caesare Augusto Cosso Lentuol Cossil fil. Cos. VIII idus Febr(u)arius dies solis, luna XIIIIX nun(dinae) Cumis, V (idus Februarias) nun(dinae) Pompeis. Robert Hannah, "Time in Written Spaces", in: Peter Keegan, Gareth Sears, Ray Laurence (eds.), Written Space in the Latin West, 200 BC to AD 300, A&C Black, 2013,
    p. 89.



  2. ^ E. G. Richards, Mapping Time, the Calendar and History, Oxford 1999. p. 269 (The treatise is lost, but the answer to the question is known, see planetary hours).


  3. ^ "Days of the Week Meaning and Origin". Astrologyclub.org. Retrieved 25 December 2016..mw-parser-output cite.citation{font-style:inherit}.mw-parser-output .citation q{quotes:"""""""'""'"}.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-free a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/6/65/Lock-green.svg/9px-Lock-green.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-limited a,.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-registration a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/d/d6/Lock-gray-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-gray-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-subscription a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/a/aa/Lock-red-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-red-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration{color:#555}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription span,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration span{border-bottom:1px dotted;cursor:help}.mw-parser-output .cs1-ws-icon a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/4/4c/Wikisource-logo.svg/12px-Wikisource-logo.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output code.cs1-code{color:inherit;background:inherit;border:inherit;padding:inherit}.mw-parser-output .cs1-hidden-error{display:none;font-size:100%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-visible-error{font-size:100%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-maint{display:none;color:#33aa33;margin-left:0.3em}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration,.mw-parser-output .cs1-format{font-size:95%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-left,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-left{padding-left:0.2em}.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-right,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-right{padding-right:0.2em}


  4. ^ replacing a system of n "one-, three-, five-, ten-, or fifteen-day periods" (>Dáibhí Ó Cróinín, 2003, p. 7). MS. 17 (now held at St. John's College, Oxford), dating at least from 1043, records five week-day lists, which it names as follows: secundum Hebreos (according to the Hebrews); secundum antiquos gentiles (according to the ancient gentiles, i.e., Romans); secundum Siluestrum papam (according to Pope Sylvester I, i.e., a list derived from the apocryphal Acta Syluestri); secundum Anglos (according to the English); secundum Scottos (according to the Irish).


  5. ^ "we have a clear reflex of the Indo-European nominative singular, with a lengthened grade, giving archaic Old Irish diu; it is suggested that what we have in the Oxford list and in Cormac's Glossary is the oldest form of Old Irish dia, representing the old nominative case of the noun in adverbial usage." Dáibhí Ó Cróinín, 2003, p. 12


  6. ^ The word scrol is glossed in Sanas Cormaic as Scroll .i. soillsi, unde est aput Scottos diu srol.i. dies solis "Srcoll, that is brightness, whence 'diu srol' among the Irish, that is Sunday".


  7. ^ Ó Cróinín has Diu luna as "represent[ing] the transitional form between Latin dies lunae and the later, Classical Old Irish dia luain ... a translation of, not a calque on, the Latin ... [It] would seem to reflect a pre-assimilation state in respect of both words," Dáibhí Ó Cróinín, 2003, p. 13


  8. ^ "The Irish word perhaps derives from Latin forms where cases other than the genitive were used, e.g., Marte."Dáibhí Ó Cróinín, 2003, p. 15


  9. ^ A form unique to Irish, meaning uncertain. A "very old" word for Wednesday, Mercúir (borrowed from the Latin (dies) Mercurii), does occur in early Leinster poems but Ó Cróinín is of the belief that Diu eathamon "reflects a still older Irish word for 'Wednesday.'"


  10. ^ A form unique to Irish. Ó Cróinín writes, "I suggest that it means simply 'on Thursday' ... it is temporal dat. of an n-stem (nom. sg. etham, gen. sg. ethamon – as in our Oxford list – and acc./dat. sg. ethamain)." (2003, p. 17) He furthermore suggests that etham ('arable land') "may be a noun of agency from ith (gen. sg. etho), with a meaning like corn-maker or some such thing; Diu eathamon might then be a day for sowing seed in a weekly regimen of activities such as we find in Críth Gablach." Dáibhí Ó Cróinín, 2003, p. 17. The form Ethomuin is found in Rawlinson B 502.


  11. ^ A form unique to Irish, its meaning unclear.


  12. ^ [1] " Māori Language Commission names for the days of the week" on Te Kete Ipurangi website, viewed 2017-12-07


  13. ^ see J. Grimm, Teutonic Mythology, p. 122-123


  14. ^ Monier-Williams, Sanskrit-English Dictionary (1899), s.v. vāsara.


  15. ^ Monier-Williams, Sanskrit-English Dictionary (1899), s.v. vāra.


  16. ^ The Chinese encyclopaedia Cihai (辞海) under the entry for "seven luminaries calendar" (七曜历/七曜曆, qī yào lì) has:
    "method of recording days according to the seven luminaries [七曜 qī yào]. China normally observes the following order: Sun, Mon, Mars, Mercury, Jupiter, Venus, and Saturn. Seven days make one week, which is repeated in a cycle. Originated in ancient Babylon (or ancient Egypt according to one theory). Used by the Romans at the time of the 1st century AD, later transmitted to other countries. This method existed in China in the 4th century. It was also transmitted to China by Manichaeans in the 8th century from the country of Kang (康) in Central Asia" (translation after Bathrobe's Days of the Week in Chinese, Japanese & Vietnamese, plus Mongolian and Buryat (cjvlang.com)



  17. ^ Richard A. Fletcher (1999). The Barbarian Conversion: From Paganism to Christianity. University of California Press. p. 257. ISBN 978-0-520-21859-8.
    McKenna, Stephen (1938). "Pagan Survivals in Galicia in the Sixth Century". Paganism and Pagan Survivals in Spain Up to the Fall of the Visigothic Kingdom. Catholic University of America. pp. 93–94. Retrieved 20 March 2013.



  18. ^ Falk, Michael (19 March 1999). "Astronomical names for the days of the week". Journal of the Royal Astronomical Society of Canada. 93 (1999–06): 122–133. arXiv:astro-ph/0307398. Bibcode:1999JRASC..93..122F. doi:10.1016/j.newast.2003.07.002.


  19. ^ Gray, 2012. The Languages of Pentecost Island.


  20. ^ Ren is "day". Numbered weekdays are used for Tuesday-Friday and sometimes Monday; the names for Saturday and Sunday come from English.


  21. ^ "Days of the Week in Chinese: Three Different Words for 'Week'". Cjvlang. Retrieved 27 October 2016.


  22. ^ "Swahili days, months, dates". online.fr. Archived from the original on 9 August 2007.


  23. ^ [2] Archived 20 November 2008 at the Wayback Machine


  24. ^ Astronomy and Basque Language, Henrike Knörr, Oxford VI and SEAC 99 "Astronomy and Cultural Diversity", La Laguna, June 1999. It references Alessandro Bausani, 1982, The prehistoric Basque week of three days: archaeoastronomical notes, The Bulletin of the Center for Archaeoastronomy (Maryland), v. 2, 16-22.


  25. ^ See the image in Anthony, Charlotte. "Rushing to preserve Ladino legacies". Crescent City Jewish News. Retrieved 31 May 2016. The Ladino names are in the right-hand column, written in Hebrew characters.




Further reading




  • Brown, Cecil H. (1989). "Naming the days of the week: A cross-language study of lexical acculturation". Current Anthropology. 30 (4): 536–550. doi:10.1086/203782. JSTOR 2743391.


  • Falk, Michael (1999). "Astronomical Names for the Days of the Week". Journal of the Royal Astronomical Society of Canada. 93: 122–133. arXiv:astro-ph/0307398. Bibcode:1999JRASC..93..122F. doi:10.1016/j.newast.2003.07.002.

  • Neugebauer, Otto (1979). Ethiopic astronomy and computus, Österreichische Akademie der Wissenschaften, philosophisch-historische klasse, sitzungsberichte, 347 (Vienna)












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