frjádagr
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Old Norse
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From earlier *fríadagr, presumably borrowed from Old Saxon *frīadag, *frīgadag (perhaps through Middle Low German vrīdach, vrigedach), from Proto-West Germanic *Frījā dag (“Friday”).
Noun
[edit]frjádagr m
- Friday
- Synonyms: freyjudagr, friggjardagr, fræigjadagr
Descendants
[edit]- Icelandic: frjádagur
- Faroese: fríggjadagur
- Middle Norwegian: fræigjadagr (akin to friggjardagr)
- Norwegian: fredag; (dialectal) frei(d)dag, frædag
- Elfdalian: frjådag
- Old Swedish: frēadagher, frīadagher
- Swedish: fredag
- Danish: fredag
- Norwegian Bokmål: fredag
- Gutnish: fredagar, fredag, freda
- → Estonian: reede
- → Finnish: perjantai
See also
[edit](days of the week) dagar í vikunni; sunnudagr, mánadagr/mánudagr, týsdagr, óðinsdagr, þórsdagr, frjádagr, laugardagr (Category: non:Days of the week)
Categories:
- Old Norse terms derived from Latin
- Old Norse terms borrowed from Old Saxon
- Old Norse terms derived from Old Saxon
- Old Norse terms borrowed from Middle Low German
- Old Norse terms derived from Middle Low German
- Old Norse terms derived from Proto-West Germanic
- Old Norse lemmas
- Old Norse nouns
- Old Norse masculine nouns
- non:Days of the week