The names of the days of the seven-day 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 in the Roman Empire during Late Antiquity. In some other languages, the days are named for 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.
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 the 6th 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).
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/Helios (Sun) |
Monday Luna/Selene (Moon) |
Tuesday Mars/Ares (Mars) |
Wednesday Mercurius/Hermes (Mercury) |
Thursday Iuppiter/Zeus (Jupiter) |
Friday Venus/Aphrodite (Venus)
|
Saturday Saturnus/Kronos (Saturn) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Greek | ἡμέρα Ἡλίου hêméra Hêlíou |
ἡμέρα Σελήνης hêméra Selếnês |
ἡμέρα Ἄρεως hêméra Áreôs |
ἡμέρα Ἑρμοῦ hêméra Hermoú |
ἡμέρα Διός hêméra Diós |
ἡμέρα Ἀφροδίτης hêméra Aphrodítês |
ἡμέρα Κρόνου hêméra Krónou |
Latin | dies Sōlis | dies Lūnae | dies Martis | dies Mercuriī | dies Iovis | dies Veneris | dies Saturnī |
Except for modern Portuguese, the Romance languages preserved the Latin names, except for the names of Sunday, which was replaced by [dies] Dominicus (Dominica), i.e. "Day of the Lord" and of Saturday, which was named for the Sabbath.
Old Irish adopted the names from Latin, but introduced separate terms of uncertain origin for Wednesday, Thursday and Friday.
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[3] | diu[4] srol dies scrol[5] |
Diu luna [6] | Diu mart[7] | Diu iath[8] | Diu eathamon[9] | Diu triach[10] | Diu satur[n] |
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 | Jerdein | Jeheiney | Jesarn |
Albanian adopted the Latin terms[source?]. 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 | Linggò [☉1] Dominggo in most other Philippine languages |
Lunes | Martes | Miyerkules | Huwebes | Biyernes | Sábado [♄1] |
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] |
The Germanic peoples adapted the system introduced by the Romans by substituting the Norse/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.[11] 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.
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 | *Wōdanas dagaz | *Þunras dagaz | *Frijjōz dagaz | *Saturnas dagaz, *Laugōz dagaz |
Old English | Sunnandæg | Mōnandæg | Tīwesdæg | Wōdnesdæg | Þunresdæg | Frīgedæg | Sæternesdæg |
Old Saxon | Sunnundag | *Mānundag | *Tiuwesdag, *Thingesdag | Wōdanesdag | *Thunaresdag | Frīadag | *Sunnunāƀand, *Satarnesdag |
Old High German | Sunnûntag | Mânetag | Zîestag | Wuotanestag | Donarestag | Frîjatag | Sunnûnâband, Sambaztag [♄1] |
Middle Low German | Sunnedag | Manedag | Dingesdag | Wodenesdag | Donersdag | Vrīdag | Sunnenavend, Satersdag |
German | Sonntag | Montag | Dienstag [♂1], Ziestag (Swiss 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 | Mëttwoch | Donneschdeg | Freideg | Samschdeg |
West Frisian | Snein | Moandei | Tiisdei | Woansdei | Tongersdei | Freed | Sneon[♄3], Saterdei |
Low Saxon | Sünndag | Maandag | Dingsdag | Middeweek, Goonsdag (rarely Woonsdag) | Dünnerdag | Freedag | Sünnavend, Saterdag |
Old Norse | sunnudagr | mánadagr | tysdagr | óðinsdagr | þórsdagr | frjádagr | laugardagr [♄2], sunnunótt |
Faroese | sunnudagur | mánadagur | týsdagur | mikudagur [☿1], ónsdagur (Suðuroy) | hósdagur/ tórsdagur (Suðuroy) |
fríggjadagur | leygardagur |
Icelandic | sunnudagur | mánudagur | þriðjudagur | miðvikudagur [☿1] | fimmtudagur | föstudagur | laugardagur |
Norwegian Nynorsk | sundag/søndag | måndag | tysdag | onsdag | torsdag | fredag | laurdag [♄2] |
Norwegian Bokmål | søndag | mandag | tirsdag | onsdag | torsdag | fredag | lørdag [♄2] |
Danish | søndag | mandag | tirsdag | onsdag | torsdag | fredag | lørdag [♄2] |
Swedish | söndag | måndag | tisdag | onsdag | torsdag | fredag | lördag [♄2] |
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 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.[12] Knowledge of Greek astrology existed since about the 2nd century BC, but references to the vāra 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.
Sunday the Sun (Aditya, Ravi) |
Monday the Moon (Soma, Indu) |
Tuesday Mars (Mangala) |
Wednesday Mercury (Budha) |
Thursday Jupiter (Guru) |
Friday Venus (Shukra) |
Saturday Saturn (Shani) | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Hindi | रविवार Ravivār |
सोमवार Somavār |
मंगलवार Mangalavār |
बुधवार Budhavār |
गुरूवार Guruvār |
शुक्रवार Shukravār |
शनिवार Shanivār |
Nepali | आइतवार Aaitabar |
सोमवार Sombar |
मंगलवार Mangalbar |
बुधवार Budhbar |
बिहिवार Bihibar |
शुक्रवार Sukrabar |
शनिवार Sanibar |
Marathi | रविवार Ravivār |
सोमवार Somavār |
मंगळवार Mangaḷavār |
बुधवार Budhavār |
गुरूवार Guruvār |
शुक्रवार Shukravār |
शनिवार Shanivār |
Bengali | রবিবার Robibar |
সোমবার Shombar |
মঙ্গলবার Monggolbar |
বুধবার Budhbar |
বৃহস্পতিবার Brihôshpotibar |
শুক্রবার Shukrobar |
শনিবার Shonibar |
Sindhi | aacheru آچر |
soomaru سومر |
angaro انڱارو |
arbau اربع |
kameesa خميس |
jum'o جمعو |
chhanchher ڇنڇر |
Urdu | Itwār اتوار | Pīr پیر[☽4] or | Mangal منگل | Budh بدھ | Jumā-rāt جمعراتRaat = Eve | Jum'ah جمعہ[♀4] | ہفتہ Haftah [♄6] |
Bhojpuri | एतवार Aitwār |
सोमार Somār |
मंगर Mangar |
बुध Budh |
बियफे Bi'phey |
सुक्क Sukk |
सनिच्चर Sanichchar |
Kashmiri | اَتھ وار Aath'var |
ژندر وار Tsander'var |
پم وار Bom'var |
برھ وار Budh'var |
برس وار Bres'var |
جُمھ Jummah |
بٹ وار Bat'var |
Gujarati | રવિવાર Ravivār |
સોમવાર Somvār |
મંગળવાર Mangaḷvār |
બુધવાર Budhvār |
ગુરૂવાર Guruvār |
શુક્રવાર Shukravār |
શનિવાર Shanivār |
Punjabi | ਐਤਵਾਰ etvār |
ਸੋਮਵਾਰ sōmvār |
ਮੰਗਲਵਾਰ mangalvār |
ਬੁੱਧਵਾਰ búdvār |
ਵੀਰਵਾਰ vīrvār |
ਸ਼ੁੱਕਰਵਾਰ shukkarvār |
ਸ਼ਨਿੱਚਰਵਾਰ shaniccharvār |
Maldivian | އާދީއްތަ Aadheettha |
ހޯމަ Homa |
އަންގާރަ Angaara |
ބުދަ Budha |
ބުރާސްފަތި Buraasfathi |
ހުކުރު Hukuru |
ހޮނިހިރު Honihiru |
Kannada | ಭಾನುವಾರ Bhanu Vaara |
ಸೋಮವಾರ Soma Vaara |
ಮಂಗಳವಾರ Mangala Vaara |
ಬುಧವಾರ Budha Vaara |
ಗುರುವಾರ Guru Vaara |
ಶುಕ್ರವಾರ Shukra Vaara |
ಶನಿವಾರ Shani Vaara |
Oriya | ଋବିବାର Ravivār |
ସୋମବାର Somavār |
ମଙ୍ଗଳବାର Mangalavār |
ବୁଧବାର Budhavār |
ଗୁରୁବାର Guruvār |
ଶୁକ୍ରବାର Shukravār |
ଶନିବାର Shanivār |
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 |
Malayalam | ഞായര് Nhāyar |
തിങ്കള് Tingal |
ചൊവ്വ Chovva |
ബുധന് Budhan |
വ്യാഴം Vyāzham |
വെള്ളി Velli |
ശനി 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 Template:IPA-mnw 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] |
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 |
Mongolian | адъяа ad'yaa |
сумъяа sum'yaa |
ангараг angarag |
буд bud |
бархабадь barhabad' |
сугар sugar |
санчир sanchir |
Javanese | Raditya | Soma | Anggara | Buda | Respati | Sukra | Tumpek |
Balinese | Redite | Coma | Anggara | Buda | Wraspati | Sukra | Saniscara |
Sinhala | ඉරිදා Iridaa |
සඳුදා Sandudaa |
අඟහරුවාදා Angaharuwaadaa |
බදාදා Badaadaa |
බ්රහස්පතින්දා Brahaspathindaa |
සිකුරාදා Sikuraadaa |
සෙනසුරාදා Senasuraadaa |
Sanskrit | भानुवासरम् Bhaanuvaasaram |
इन्दुवासरम् Induvaasaram |
भौमवासरम् Bhaumavaasaram |
सौम्यवासरम् Saumyavaasaram |
गुरुवासरम् Guruvaasaram |
भृगुवासरम् Bhruguvaasaram |
स्थिरवासरम् Sthiravaasaram |
The East Asian naming system of 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).[13] The 4th-century date, according to the Cihai encyclopedia,Template: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 Yi Jing 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.
Sunday | Monday | Tuesday | Wednesday | Thursday | Friday | Saturday | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Celestial Object | Sun (日) First Star |
Moon (月) Second Star |
Mars (火) Third Star |
Mercury (水) Fourth Star |
Jupiter (木) Fifth Star |
Venus (金) Sixth Star |
Saturn (土) Seventh Star |
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 (Hangul) | 일요일 Ilyoil | 월요일 Wolyoil | 화요일 Hwayoil | 수요일 Suyoil | 목요일 Mogyoil | 금요일 Geumyoil | 토요일 Toyoil |
Tibetan (བོད་ཡིག་) | གཟའ་ཉི་མ། | གཟའ་ཟླ་བ། | གཟའ་མིག་དམར། | གཟའ་ལྷག་པ། | གཟའ་ཕུར་བུ། | གཟའ་པ་སངས། | གཟའ་སྤེན་པ། |
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 |
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.[14]
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, although the planetary names generally are retained.
In Chinese, the week is referred to as the cycle of the stars (Chinese: 星期; pinyin: Xīngqī). And Sunday means the "sun's day"(星期日, Xīngqī Rì) or the "week's day"(周日, Zhōurì). Monday is the "first star's day"(星期一, Xīngqī Yī) or the "first weekday"(周一, Zhōuyī), Tuesday is the "second star's day"(星期二, Xīngqī Èr) or the "second weekday"(周二, Zhōu'èr), and so on.
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] |
Hebrew | יום ראשון yom rishon |
יום שני yom sheyni |
יום שלישי yom shlishi |
יום רביעי yom revi'i |
יום חמישי yom khamishi |
יום שישי yom shishi |
יום שבת yom 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] |
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 or chúa nhật [☉1] | (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-thalathā’ |
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 | Ahad | Isnin | Selasa | Rabu | Khamis | Jumaat [♀4] | Sabtu [♄5] |
Indonesian | Minggu [☉1] (Portuguese) | Senin | Selasa | Rabu | Kamis | Jumat [♀4] | Sabtu [♄5] |
Sundanese | Minggu / Minggon | 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 |
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 | ku | ku | ku | ku | ku | ku | ku |
Old Turkic | birinç kün | ikinç kün | üçünç kün | törtinç kün | beşinç kün | altınç kün | yetinç kün |
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 |
Uzbek | Yakshanba | Dushanba | Seshanba | Chorshanba | Payshanba | Juma | Shanba |
Number From One | Day Zero | Day One | Day Two | Day Three | Day Four | Day Five | Day Six |
Chinese characters (and Pinyin) |
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 |
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".[15] This convention is also found in some Austronesian languages whose speakers were converted to Christianity by European missionaries.[16]
In Swahili the day begins at sunrise rather than sunset, and so offset by twelve hours from the Arabic and Hebrew calendar. 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[18] | jumamosi | jumapili | jumatatu | jumanne | jumatano | alhamisi [♃2] | ijumaa [♀4] |
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.[19]
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.[20]
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]) |
☉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.
☽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 [source?])
☽5 From an Old Burmese word, not of Indic origin.
♂1 Thing (Assembly), of which god Tyr/Ziu was the patron.
♂2 Second day of the week (cf. Hungarian kettő "two")
♂4 From Arabic "ath-Thalaathaaʼ" (third day)
☿1 Mid-week or Middle
☿2 The First Fast (Christianity)
♃1 The day between two fasts (An Dé idir dhá aoin, contracted to An Déardaoin) (Christianity)
♃2 Five (Arabic)
♀1 The Fast (Celtic) or Fasting Day (Icelandic) (Christianity)
♀2
Good Friday or Preparation (Christianity)
♀3 Day of Faith (Islam)
♀4 Gathering/Assembly/Meeting (Islam) – in Malta with no Islamic connotations
♄1 Shabbat or seventh-day Sabbath (Judeo–Christian)
♄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
Days of the Week |
---|
Monday | Tuesday | Wednesday | Thursday | Friday | Saturday | Sunday |
Template:Time measurement and standards Template:Time in religion and mythology
Category:Units of time
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Category:History of astronomy
Category:History of astrology
Days of the week