Thursday
From open-dictionary.com - the free dictionary.
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English
Etymology
The English noun Thursday comes from Old English for "Thor's day", Thor was the god of thunder
Noun
- The fourth day of the week in Europe and in systems using the ISO 8601 norm.
- The fifth day of the week in the USA.
- An appointment, person, or feeling associated with this day of the week.
Translations
- Albanian: e enjte
- Anglo-Saxon: Þunresdæg m
- Arabic: الخميس
- Azerbaijani: cümə axşamı
- Basque: ostegun
- Blackfoot: Náámiksistsiko
- Breton: Yaou m, diriaou adverb
- Bulgarian: четвъртък m
- Catalan: dijous m
- Cherokee: ᏅᎩᏁ ᎢᎦ
- Chinese: 星期四
- Corsican: ghjovi
- Croatian: Četvrtak
- Czech: čtvrtek m
- Danish: torsdag
- Dutch: donderdag m
- Esperanto: ĵaŭdo
- Estonian: neljapäev
- Faroese: hósdagur m
- Finnish: torstai
- French: jeudi m
- Frisian: tongersdei
- Georgian: ხუთშაბათი
- German: Donnerstag m
- Greek: Πέμπτη f
- Hebrew: יום חמישי (yom kha-mee-SHEE)
- Hindi: गुरूवार
- Hungarian: csütörtök
- Icelandic: fimmtudagur m
- Indonesian: kamis
- Interlingua: jovedi
- Irish: An Déardaoin
- Italian: giovedì m
- Japanese: 木曜日 (もくようび, mokuyōbi)
- Korean: 목요일 (木曜日; mogyoil)
- Latin: dies jovis
- Latvian: ceturtdiena
- Lithuanian: ketvirtadienis m
- Maori: täite
- Norwegian: torsdag
- Occitan: [[]]
- Polish: czwartek
- Portuguese: quinta-feira
- Romanian: joi f
- Ruanda: Kwakane
- Russian: четверг
- Serbian: четвртак
- Slovak: štvrtok m
- Slovene: četrtek m
- Somali: Khamiis
- Sotho: Labone
- Spanish: jueves m
- Swedish: torsdag
- Tagalog: Huwebes
- Thai: วันพฤหัสบดี
- Turkish: Perşembe
- Vietnamese: thứ năm (literally: number five)
- Wolof: Alxames
- Xhosa: [[]]
- Yiddish: דאָנערשטיק (DOH-ner-shtik)