Sunday
pronunciation
How to pronounce Sunday in British English: UK [ˈsʌndeɪ]
How to pronounce Sunday in American English: US [ˈsʌndeɪ]
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- Verb:
- spend Sunday
Word Origin
- Sunday
- Sunday: [OE] Sunday is part of the general system of naming days of the week after heavenly bodies inherited by the Germanic peoples from the ancient Mediterranean world. The Romans called the day diēs sōlis ‘day of the sun’, which in translation has become German sonntag, Dutch zondag, Swedish söndag, Danish söndag, and English sunday. Welsh retains the term (dydd sul), but the Romance languages have gone over to variations on ‘Lord’s day’ (French dimanche, Spanish domingo, etc).
- Sunday (n.)
- first day of the week, Old English sunnandæg (Northumbrian sunnadæg), literally "day of the sun," from sunnan, oblique case of sunne "sun" (see sun (n.)) + dæg "day" (see day). A Germanic loan-translation of Latin dies solis "day of the sun," which is itself a loan-translation of Greek hemera heliou. Compare Old Saxon sunnun dag, Old Frisian sunnandei, Old Norse sunnundagr, Dutch zondag, German Sonntag "Sunday." In European Christian cultures outside Germanic often with a name meaning "the Lord's Day" (Latin Dominica). Sunday-school dates from 1783 (originally for secular instruction); Sunday clothes is from 1640s. Sunday driver is from 1925.
Example
- 1. The dragon boat races continue sunday morning .
- 2. Mother 's day is the second sunday in may .
- 3. Baumgartner safely lands in southeastern new mexico on sunday .
- 4. On the sunday before christmas , yancey sought out peterson at church services .
- 5. Following divine liturgy this sunday we orthodox will celebrate the forgiveness vespers with the rite of mutual forgiveness .