< Reconstruction:Proto-West Germanic

Reconstruction:Proto-West Germanic/Sunnōn dag

This Proto-West Germanic entry contains reconstructed terms and roots. As such, the term(s) in this entry are not directly attested, but are hypothesized to have existed based on comparative evidence.

Proto-West Germanic

Etymology

From *Sunnōn (the Sun's) + *dag (day), calque of Latin diēs Sōlis (Sunday, literally day of the Sun).

Noun

*Sunnōn dag m

  1. Sunday

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
    • Middle Dutch: sondach, sonnendach
      • Dutch: zondag
        • Afrikaans: Sondag
        • Berbice Creole Dutch: sondaka
        • Jersey Dutch: Zœndix
        • Negerhollands: sondag
          • Virgin Islands Creole: grossondag
        • Skepi Creole Dutch: sondak
        • Lokono: sondakha
        • Mohegan-Pequot: zunatar
        • Japanese: どんたく (dontaku)
      • Limburgish: zönjig, zóndig
  • Old English: sunnandæġ
    • Middle English: Sunnenday, Sonnendai, Sonneday, Sonenday, Sunneday, Sonday, sunnedei; zondai
  • Old Frisian: sunnandei, sonnendei
    • North Frisian: söndai, saandi
    • Saterland Frisian: Sundai
    • West Frisian: snein
  • Old High German: sunnuntag
  • Old Saxon: sunnundag
    • Middle Low German: sunnedag
  • Old Norse: sunnudagr, sunundægi

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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