djueves

Ladino

Alternative forms

  • djugeves, djugueves (Istanbul), džuevis (Sarajevo)

Etymology

Inherited from Old Spanish iueues, from Latin Iovis dīēs, variant of dīēs Iovis.

Noun

djueves m (Hebrew spelling ג׳ואיב׳יס)[1]

  1. Thursday (the fifth day of the week in many religious traditions, and the fourth day of the week in systems using the ISO 8601 norm; it follows Wednesday and precedes Friday)
    • 2017 June 12, Amor Ayala, Los sefardíes de Bulgaria: Estudio y edición crítica de la obra «Notas istorikas» de Avraam Moshe Tadjer[1], Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co KG, →ISBN, page 402:
      Djueves la noche, 14 marso, se reusho a obtener las permisyones menesterozas por ekspedir la misma noche, los ayudos para <182>Edirne, la primera ekspedisyon de ayudos embiada para esta sivdad.
      Thursday night, March 14, getting the permissions needed for hurrying up the support for Edirne succeeded, the first relief expedition sent to this city.

See also

References

  1. ^ djueves”, in Trezoro de la Lengua Djudeoespanyola [Treasure of the Judeo-Spanish Language] (in Ladino, Hebrew, and English), Instituto Maale Adumim