dæg
Old English
Alternative forms
- deġ, deag, dœg, dæiġ
Etymology
From Proto-Germanic *dagaz. Cognate with Old Frisian dei, Old Saxon dag, Old Dutch dag, Old High German tag, Old Norse dagr, Gothic 𐌳𐌰𐌲𐍃 (dags).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /dæj/
Noun
dæġ m (nominative plural dagas)
- day, (usually) as a period from sunrise to sunset and (scientifically) as a 24-hour period from sunrise to sunrise
- Þā dagas bēoþ lange, ac þā ġēar bēoþ sċort.
- The days are long, but the years are short.
- c. 994, Ælfric, The Seasons of the Year:
- Wē hātaþ ānne dæġ fram sunnan upgange oþ ǣfen, ac swā þēah is on bōcum ġeteald tō ānum dæġe fram þǣre sunnan upgange oþ þæt hēo eft becume þǣr hēo ǣr upp stāg. On þām fæce sind ġetealda fēower and twentiġ tīda.
- To us a day means from sunrise to sunset, but in books, one day is considered to last from when the sun rises to when it returns to where it started from. In that interval there are considered to be 24 hours.
- the runic character ᛞ (/d/)
Declension
Declension of dæg (strong a-stem)
Case | Singular | Plural |
---|---|---|
nominative | dæġ | dagas |
accusative | dæġ | dagas |
genitive | dæġes | daga |
dative | dæġe | dagum |
Synonyms
- dōgor
Derived terms
- dæġhwamlīċ
- dæġes ēage
- hēodæġ
- īdæġes
- ġēares dæġ
- ġeōdagas
- ġēoldæġ
- ġiestrandæġ
- on þissum dagum
- tōdæġ
- wintres dæġ
Descendants
- Middle English: day, dai, dæi, dey, daȝ, dæȝ, dei, daye, daȝȝ, daȝh, daiȝ, *dah
- English: day
- Scots: day
- Yola: die, dei, dey, daie