þursdæg

Old English

Etymology

Possibly from a contraction of þunresdæġ (Thursday, literally Thunor's day), but more likely from Old Norse þōrsdagr or Old Danish þūrsdag (Thursday) (compare modern Danish torsdag); all from Proto-West Germanic *Þunras dag (day of the thunder god), a calque of Latin dies Iovis, equivalent to Þunres (genitive of the god's name Þunor) +‎ dæġ (day). More at thunder, day.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˈθursˌdæj/, [ˈθurˠzˌdæj]

Noun

þursdæġ m

  1. Thursday

Declension

Strong a-stem:

singular plural
nominative þursdæġ þursdagas
accusative þursdæġ þursdagas
genitive þursdæġes þursdaga
dative þursdæġe þursdagum

Descendants

  • Middle English: Thursday, Thoresday, Thuresday, Thurysday, Þursday
    • English: Thursday
    • Middle Scots: Thursday, Thurisday
      • Scots: Fuirsday, Foorsday
    • Yola: Thorsdei

See also

Days of the week in Old English · wicdagas (layout · text)
mōnandæġ tīwesdæġ wōdnesdæġ þunresdæġ frīġedæġ sæternesdæġ sunnandæġ