djueves
Appearance
Ladino
[edit]Alternative forms
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Inherited from Old Spanish iueues, from Latin Iovis dīēs, variant of dīēs Iovis.
Noun
[edit]djueves m (Hebrew spelling ג׳ואיב׳יס)[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
[edit]- days of the week (appendix): aljhad · lunes · martes · mierkoles · djueves · viernes · shabat [edit]