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
- 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.
- Homilies of the Anglo-Saxon Church
Declension
Strong a-stem:
singular | plural | |
---|---|---|
nominative | sunnandæġ | sunnandagas |
accusative | sunnandæġ | sunnandagas |
genitive | sunnandæġes | sunnandaga |
dative | sunnandæġe | sunnandagum |
Derived terms
- Palmsunnandæġ (“Palm Sunday”)
- sunnanmorgen (“Sunday morning”)
- sunnanniht (“Saturday night”)
- sunnanǣfen (“Saturday evening”)
Descendants
See also
Days of the week in Old English · wicdagas (layout · text) | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
mōnandæġ | tīwesdæġ | wōdnesdæġ | þunresdæġ | frīġedæġ | sæternesdæġ | sunnandæġ |