wodnesdæg
Old English
Alternative forms
- *wēdnesdæġ, wōdnesdœġ
Etymology
From Wōdnes (“gen. of Wōden”) + dæġ (“day”), from Proto-West Germanic *Wōdanas dag, a calque of Latin diēs Mercuriī.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈwoːd.nesˌdæj/, [ˈwoːd.nezˌdæj]
Noun
wōdnesdæġ m
- Wednesday
- c. 990, Wessex Gospels, Matthew 5
- Ðis sċeal on Wōdnesdæġ, on ðǣre syxtēoðan wucan ofer Pentecosten; and on Frīḡedæġ innan ðǣre ċȳswucan
- This should [be read] on the Wednesday of the sixteenth week after Pentecost and on the Friday of the Cheese Week.
- c. 990, Wessex Gospels, Matthew 5
Declension
Strong a-stem:
| singular | plural | |
|---|---|---|
| nominative | wōdnesdæġ | wōdnesdagas |
| accusative | wōdnesdæġ | wōdnesdagas |
| genitive | wōdnesdæġes | wōdnesdaga |
| dative | wōdnesdæġe | wōdnesdagum |
Related terms
- wōdnesniht (“Tuesday night”)
Descendants
- Middle English: Wednesday, wedenesday, wednesday, Wednesdei, Wedonesday, weodnesdei (AB language), wodnysday (Kent), wodnesdai, wodinsdai (Oxfordshire), Wennessday, Wensday, Wonnysday, wonysday (syncopic, mostly Late Middle English)
See also
| Days of the week in Old English · wicdagas (layout · text) | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| mōnandæġ | tīwesdæġ | wōdnesdæġ | þunresdæġ | frīġedæġ | sæternesdæġ | sunnandæġ |