цетвьрьге
Old Novgorodian
Etymology
Inherited from Proto-Slavic *četvьrgъ. Cognate with Old East Slavic четвьргъ (četvĭrgŭ), Old Ruthenian четверъ (četver) and Russian четве́рг (četvérg).
Noun
цетвьрьге • (cʹjetvĭrĭge) m
- Thursday
- c. 1160‒1180, Берестяная грамота № 585 [Birchbark letter no. 585][1], Novgorod:
- … въ чет[вьрьгъ] …
- … vŭ cʹjet[vĭrĭgŭ] …
- … on Thursday …
Related terms
- цетвьрте (cʹjetvĭrte, “fourth”)
- цетвьртина f (cʹjetvĭrtina, “quarter”)
- цетвьртъка f (cʹjetvĭrtŭka, “quarter”)
- цетвьрть f (cʹjetvĭrtĭ, “quarter”)
- цетвьртьне (cʹjetvĭrtĭne, “fourth”)
- цетꙑри (cʹjetyri, “four”)
- цетꙑри десѧте (cʹjetyri desęte, “forty”)
- цетꙑри на десѧте (cʹjetyri na desęte, “fourteen”)
- цетꙑри съта (cʹjetyri sŭta, “four hundred”)
See also
| Days of the week in Old Novgorodian · (layout · text) | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| *понедѣл- (*poneděl-) | *вътор- (*vŭtor-) | середа (sereda) | цетвьрге (cʹjetvĭrge) | пѧтьница (pętĭnicʹa) | сѫбота (sǫbota) | недѣлꙗ (nedělja) |
Further reading
- “чет[вьрьгъ] (letter no. 585), c. 1160‒1180”, in Древнерусские берестяные грамоты [Birchbark Literacy from Medieval Rus][2][3] (in Russian), http://gramoty.ru, 2007–2025