dies Lunae
Latin
Previous: | diēs Dominicus, diēs Sōlis |
---|---|
Next: | diēs Mārtis |
Etymology
From diēs (“day”) and Lūnae, genitive of Lūna (“the Moon”).
Pronunciation
- (Classical) IPA(key): /ˈdi.eːs ˈluː.nae̯/, [ˈd̪ieːs̠ ˈɫ̪uːnäe̯]
- (Ecclesiastical) IPA(key): /ˈdi.es ˈlu.ne/, [ˈd̪iːes ˈluːne]
Noun
diēs Lūnae f (genitive diēī Lūnae); fifth declension
- Monday
Declension
Fifth-declension noun with an indeclinable portion.
Case | Singular | Plural |
---|---|---|
Nominative | diēs Lūnae | diēs Lūnae |
Genitive | diēī Lūnae | diērum Lūnae |
Dative | diēī Lūnae | diēbus Lūnae |
Accusative | diem Lūnae | diēs Lūnae |
Ablative | diē Lūnae | diēbus Lūnae |
Vocative | diēs Lūnae | diēs Lūnae |
Coordinate terms
- diēs hebdomadis
- diēs Dominica, diēs Dominicus, diēs Sōlis
- diēs Mārtis
- diēs Mercuriī
- diēs Iovis
- diēs Veneris
- diēs Sabbatī, diēs Saturnī
Descendants
From diēs Lūnae:
- Franco-Provençal: delon
- Walloon: dilon
- Old Occitan:
- Catalan: dilluns
- Occitan: diluns
- → Breton: dilun
- → Cornish: de Lun
From Lūnae dīēs:
- Eastern Romance
- Aromanian: luni
- Romanian: luni
- Franco-Provençal: londi
- Gallo-Italic
- Lombard: lönesdé
- Piedmontese: lùnes
- Italo-Dalmatian
- Corsican: luni
- Italian: lunedì
- Neapolitan: lunnerì
- Tarantino: lunedìe
- Sicilian: luni, lunnidì, luneddì, lunidìa
- Old French: lundi
- Gallo: lundi
- French: lundi, lundy, Lundy
- Saint Dominican Creole French: lindy
- Haitian Creole: lendi
- Louisiana Creole French: lundi, lindi
- Mauritian Creole: lindi
- Saint Dominican Creole French: lindy
- Norman:
- Continental: leundi
- Guernsey: lundi, làndi
- Jersey: Lundi
- Sark: lũdi
- Walloon: londi
- Rhaeto-Romance
- Friulian: lunis
- Ladin: lunesc
- Romansch: lündeschdi, glindesdi, glindasde, gliendisdis, gliendasgis
- Sardinian: lunis
- Venetian: luni
- West Iberian
- Asturian: llunes
- Aragonese: lunes
- Old Portuguese: lũes
- Galician: luns
- Old Spanish:
- Ladino: lunes
- Spanish: lunes (see there for further descendants)
- Calques
- Albanian: e hënë
- Proto-West Germanic: *mānini dag (see there for further descendants)
- Middle Irish: día lúain (partial)
- Irish: Dé Luain
- Scottish Gaelic: Diluain
- Welsh: dydd Llun (partial)