• isyasad@lemmy.world
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    1 month ago

    Lots of other languages have days named after the sun, moon, and 5 planets or the gods associated with the planets. Obviously we have Sunday and Monday, or lunes in Spanish, but that’s also why in Spanish, Mars = Marte, Tuesday = Martes. Probably most famously in English is Thursday coming from Thor’s day (Þunras dag) with Thor being the equivalent to Zeus or Jupiter, which is where jueves comes from in Spanish. In Spanish though their sun-day got remained to God’s day (domingo) and saturn-day to sabbath (sabado). Probably most interesting is that the connection even applies to Japanese. The days go in this order: 日月火水木金土 which means “sun moon fire water wood metal earth” which are the classical Chinese 5 elements connected to everything from the 60-year sexagisimal calendar to the bagua tao trigrams on the Republic of Korea flag. And if course, they’re also the names of the planets with Mars being fire-planet, Mercury being water-planet, Jupiter being wood-planet, Venus being metal-planet, and Saturn being earth-planet.

    So the planet Jupiter (etc.) is to some degree represented in the Thursdays (etc.) of three different languages. Not really saying that this makes more sense than Portuguese, but I think it’s cool

    • Count Regal Inkwell@pawb.social
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      1 month ago

      I’m entirely aware of that.

      I also think it’s fucking stupid.

      I’ve learned english as a little kid. It’s been more than 20 years.

      I’ve been formally considered “fluent” on it since I was 17, so 13 years ago.

      I have never properly learned the weekday names in english. I also patently refuse.

      Why isn’t TWOsday the second? Why is there a fried day? Is that the only day you’re allowed to eat deep fried foods?

      Just number your days instead of using weird mythological names that reference gods you don’t even worship anymore and used to kill people for woshipping. ****ing gringos.

    • Ashelyn
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      1 month ago

      Specifically, Friday in Japanese translates to Gold Day, which also has a lot of cultural connotations with it being the lucky day of the week