목요일
Korean
Etymology
Sino-Korean word from 木曜日, from 木曜 (“Jupiter”) + 日 (“day”), from Latin dies Jovis (“day of Jupiter”), through Indian astrology in the fifth century as बॄहस्पतिवार (bṝhaspativāra, “of the planet Jupiter”) into Buddhist astrology in the eighth century as 木曜日.
Pronunciation
- (SK Standard/Seoul) IPA(key): [mo̞ɡjoiɭ]
- Phonetic hangul: [모교일]
| Romanizations | |
|---|---|
| Revised Romanization? | mogyoil |
| Revised Romanization (translit.)? | mog'yoil |
| McCune–Reischauer? | mogyoil |
| Yale Romanization? | mok.yoil |
Noun
목요일 • (mogyoil) (hanja 木曜日)
Synonyms
- 목요(木曜) (mogyo)
See also
- 칠요일(七曜日) (chiryoil)
- days of the week: 요일(曜日) (yoil) (appendix): 일요일(日曜日) ("iryoil", as the first day of the week in South Korea) · 월요일(月曜日) (woryoil) · 화요일(火曜日) (hwayoil) · 수요일(水曜日) (suyoil) · 목요일(木曜日) (mogyoil) · 금요일(金曜日) (geumyoil) · 토요일(土曜日) (toyoil) · 일요일(日曜日) ("iryoil", as the last day of the week in North Korea) [edit]