mandag
Danish
[ˈmanˀd̥a]
noun
Definitions
- Monday
Etymology
Derived from Old Danish mandagh derived from Old Norse mánadagr derived from Proto-Germanic *mēniniz dagaz (day of the moon).
Origin
Proto-Germanic
*mēniniz dagaz
Gloss
day of the moon
Timeline
Distribution of cognates by language
Geogrpahic distribution of cognates
Cognates and derived terms
- Monday English
- Mondayish English
- Mondayitis English
- Mondayize English
- Mondays English
- dies Lunae Latin
- dies lunae Latin
- diēs Lunae Latin
- diēs Lūnae Latin
- Montag German
- Pfingstmontag German
- Rosenmontag German
- montäglich German
- maandag Dutch, Flemish
- maandagmorgen Dutch, Flemish
- maandagochtend Dutch, Flemish
- maandags Dutch, Flemish
- maandagsmorgens Dutch, Flemish
- maandagsochtends Dutch, Flemish
- *meh₁- Proto-Indo-European
- mandag Norwegian Bokmål
- *mēniniz dagaz Proto-Germanic
- dag Swedish
- måndag Swedish
- måne Swedish
- måndag Norwegian Nynorsk
- monandæg Old English
- mōnandæġ Old English
- Monday Middle English
- mánadagr Old Norse
- mánudagur Icelandic
- manendach Middle Dutch
- *māndag Old High German
- mānintag Old High German
- mānitag Old High German
- mānotag Old High German
- Maandag Afrikaans
- mánadagur Faroese
- mōntac Middle High German
- *mānendag Old Dutch
- *mānundag Old Saxon
- mānadagher Old Swedish
- mandag Westrobothnian
- M̧ande Marshallese
- mōnadei Old Frisian
- Mande Tok Pisin
- Mane Maori
- mandagh Old Danish
- möntaog Vilamovian
- munde Sranan Tongo
- siga Monite Fijian
- monti Bavarian
- Mande Tumbuka