søndag
Danish
[ˈsœnˀd̥a]
noun
Definitions
- Sunday
Etymology
Derived from Old Danish sundagh derived from Old Norse sunnudagr derived from Proto-Germanic *sunnōniz dagaz (day of the sun).
Origin
Proto-Germanic
*sunnōniz dagaz
Gloss
day of the sun
Timeline
Distribution of cognates by language
Geogrpahic distribution of cognates
Cognates and derived terms
- Sunday English
- Sundayish English
- Sundaylike English
- Whitsun English
- sunnuntai Finnish
- dies solis Latin
- diēs Sōlis Latin
- Sonntag German
- Sonntagsbraten German
- Sonntagsbrötchen German
- Sonntagsfahrer German
- Sonntagskind German
- Sonntagskleidung German
- Sonntagsschrift German
- Sonntagsstaat German
- Palmzondag Dutch, Flemish
- zondag Dutch, Flemish
- zondagmorgen Dutch, Flemish
- zondagochtend Dutch, Flemish
- zondags Dutch, Flemish
- zondagskamer Dutch, Flemish
- zondagskind Dutch, Flemish
- zondagsmorgens Dutch, Flemish
- zondagsochtends Dutch, Flemish
- zondagsrust Dutch, Flemish
- søndag Norwegian Bokmål
- *sunnōniz dagaz Proto-Germanic
- どんたく Japanese
- サンデー Japanese
- sundag Norwegian Nynorsk
- søndag Norwegian Nynorsk
- sunnandæg Old English
- sunnandæġ Old English
- sunnenday Middle English
- sunnudagr Old Norse
- sunnudagur Icelandic
- sondach Middle Dutch
- sunnuntag Old High German
- sunnūntag Old High German
- Sondag Afrikaans
- sunnudagur Faroese
- sunnentac, sunne(n)tac Middle High German
- sunnadag Old Dutch
- sunnundag Old Saxon
- sunnodagher Old Swedish
- *sunnandei Old Frisian
- Sande Tok Pisin
- sande Tok Pisin
- sundagh Old Danish
- zuntaog Vilamovian
- sonde Sranan Tongo
- sandi Klamath-Modoc