< Reconstruction:Proto-West Germanic
Reconstruction:Proto-West Germanic/Sunnōn dag
Proto-West Germanic
Etymology
From *Sunnōn (“the Sun's”) + *dag (“day”), calque of Latin diēs Sōlis (“Sunday”, literally “day of the Sun”).
Inflection
Masculine a-stem | ||
---|---|---|
Singular | ||
Nominative | *Sunnōn dag | |
Genitive | *Sunnōn dagas | |
Singular | Plural | |
Nominative | *Sunnōn dag | *Sunnōn dagō, *Sunnōn dagōs |
Accusative | *Sunnōn dag | *Sunnōn dagā |
Genitive | *Sunnōn dagas | *Sunnōn dagō |
Dative | *Sunnōn dagē | *Sunnōn dagum |
Instrumental | *Sunnōn dagu | *Sunnōn dagum |
Descendants
- Old Dutch: sunnadag
- Old English: sunnandæġ
- Old Frisian: sunnandei, sonnendei
- Old High German: sunnuntag
- Middle High German: sunnentac, sunntac, sunnetac, suntac
- Alemannic German:
- Swabian: Sunntig, Sonndich
- Walser: ŝchunnutog, sònntag, sunntag, sunnatag, ŝchuntàg
- Bavarian: Sunnda, sunntach, suntach, sunti
- Central Franconian:
- Kölsch: Sonndach
- East Franconian: Sunndooch
- Main-Franconian: Sundich
- German: Sonntag
- Luxembourgish: Sonndeg
- Rhine Franconian:
- Pennsylvania German: Sunndaag
- Vilamovian: zuntaog
- Yiddish: זונטיק (zuntik), זונטאָג (zuntog)
- Alemannic German:
- Middle High German: sunnentac, sunntac, sunnetac, suntac
- Old Saxon: sunnundag
- → Old Norse: sunnudagr, sunundægi
- Icelandic: sunnudagur
- Faroese: sunnudagur
- Norwegian Nynorsk: sundag
- Old Swedish: sunnodagher, synnodagher
- Swedish: söndag
- Danish: søndag
- Norwegian Bokmål: søndag
- Gutnish: sundag, sundagar, sunde, sund'
- → Finnish: sunnuntai
See also
Days of the week in Proto-West Germanic · *wikōn dagō (layout · text) | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
*Sunnōn dag | *Mānini dag | *Tīwas dag | *Wōdanas dag | *Þunras dag | *Frījā dag | *Sāturnas dag |
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