Wednesday
Wednesday is the day of the week between Tuesday and Thursday. The name comes from the Old English wodnesdæg meaning "Woden's day". The astrological sign of the planet Mercury represents Wednesday, which was dies mercurii to the Romans. In English, this became Woden's Day, since the Roman god Mercury was identified with Woden in northern Europe.
When Sunday is taken as the first of the week, the day in the middle of the following week is Wednesday. Correspondingly, the German name for Wednesday has been Mittwoch (literally: "mid-week") since the 10th Century, having displaced the original name: Wochentag.
Wednesday is also in the middle of the common working week from Monday through Friday. However, see also Thursday and ISO 8601.
In the popular rhyme, "Wednesday's Child is full of woe".
In Spanish, miércoles is used to mean Wednesday, but also as a semi-rude euphemism for never ever.
An English language idiom for Wednesday is "hump day", a reference to making it through the middle of work week as getting "over the hump".
Named days
- Ash Wednesday, the first day of Lent, occurs forty days before Easter not counting Sundays.
- Spy Wednesday is an old name given to the Wednesday immediately preceding Easter, in allusion to the betrayal of Jesus by Judas Iscariot.
External link
- Where Wednesday Got Its Name (http://www.indepthinfo.com/weekdays/wednesday.shtml)
bg:Сряда ca:Dimecres de:Mittwoch als:Mittwoch et:Kolmapäev es:Miércoles eo:Merkredo fr:Mercredi hi:बुधवार id:Rabu is:Miðvikudagur it:Mercoledì la:Dies Mercurii lt:Trečiadienis ms:Rabu nl:Woensdag ja:水曜日 no:Onsdag nds:Medeweken pl:Środa ru:Среда sl:Sreda fi:Keskiviikko sv:Onsdag tt:Çärşämbe ur:بدھ wa:Mierkidi zh:星期三 ang:Wódnesdæg