sunnandæg

Old English

Etymology

From Proto-West Germanic *sunnōn dag, a calque of Latin dies Solis. Cognate with Old Frisian sunnandei, Old Saxon sunnundag, Old High German sunnuntag, Old Norse sunnudagr. Equivalent to sunnan (“the sun's”) + dæġ (day).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˈsun.nɑnˌdæj/

Noun

sunnandæġ m

  1. Sunday
    • Homilies of the Anglo-Saxon Church
      Sēo tīd onginð on ðisum Sunnandæġe, nigon wucon ǣr Ēastron, and ġeendað on ðām Saternesdæġe þǣre Ēasterlīċan wucan: tō ðām dæġe sind heonon ġetealde hundseofontiġ daga; and þæt Israhela folc, for heora māndǣdum and forgǣġednyssum, wurdon ġehergode, and hundseofontiġ ġēara on Babilonisċum þēowdōme, buton blisse and myrhðe, wunodon.
      This time begins this Sunday, nine weeks before Easter, and ends on the Saturday in the week of Easter: to that day, from here, are seventy days; and the Israelites, for their evil deeds and transgressions, were taken captive, and spent seventy years living in slavery to the Bablyonians, without joy or mirth.

Declension

Strong a-stem:

singular plural
nominative sunnandæġ sunnandagas
accusative sunnandæġ sunnandagas
genitive sunnandæġes sunnandaga
dative sunnandæġe sunnandagum

Derived terms

Descendants

  • Middle English: Sunnenday, Sonnenday, Sonneday, Sonenday, Sunneday, Sonday, sunnedei, zondai (Kent)
    • English: Sunday (see there for further descendants)
    • Scots: Soneday, Sunday
    • Yola: Zindei

See also

Days of the week in Old English · wicdagas (layout · text)
mōnandæġ tīwesdæġ wōdnesdæġ þunresdæġ frīġedæġ sæternesdæġ sunnandæġ