The days of the week were named after Norse gods and giant objects in the sky.
These names come to us originally from the Greeks and Romans, who named the days of the week after their gods.
The Anglo-Saxons, who invaded Britain hundreds of years ago, adopted this idea but substituted their own gods. The English language has inherited and changed those names a bit, but the ones we use today resemble those names.
SHOOT: Fascinating that the English language up to the present time is configured around obsolete and irrelevant Norse etymology. Makes you wonder how many of our beliefs are equally inherited but actually no longer relevant.
These names come to us originally from the Greeks and Romans, who named the days of the week after their gods.
The Anglo-Saxons, who invaded Britain hundreds of years ago, adopted this idea but substituted their own gods. The English language has inherited and changed those names a bit, but the ones we use today resemble those names.
SHOOT: Fascinating that the English language up to the present time is configured around obsolete and irrelevant Norse etymology. Makes you wonder how many of our beliefs are equally inherited but actually no longer relevant.
clipped from www.socialstudiesforkids.com Sunday: Monday: Tuesday: Wednesday: Thursday: Friday: Saturday: |
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