Old English for moon, mona, is the root for 'month' and 'monday'
Lunar is from the Latin root luna meaning 'moon'
Menses is from the Proto-Indo European root menes meaning 'month'
LUNAR and Month are two words that have their origin in moon. lunatic, menses are derivatives of these words.
month and monday
The two Old English words related to the moon are "mōna," which directly translates to "moon," and "mōnað," meaning "month." The term "mōnað" is derived from the lunar cycle, as months were traditionally based on the phases of the moon.
Honeymoon and moonstruck may be what you want.
Old English for moon, mona, is the root for 'month' and 'monday'Lunar is from the Latin root luna meaning 'moon'Menses is from the Proto-Indo European root menes meaning 'month'
"Month" and "Monday" are two words that come from Old English and relate to the moon. The Old English word for moon is "mona," which is reflected in both of these words.
The Old English word for moon was "Mona." From this, Modern English derived the words "moon," "Monday" and "month." Monday means "Moon day."
The name Moon comes from a Germanic word via Old English and is related to words like month.
I can give you some words we still have today that are pretty much the same as they were in Old English: Good, apple, gold, what, heaven, rich, work, after, earth.
Beside the list in the link below, I seem to remember "lunacy" and "lunatic" specifically in some of Freud's writings among others, then again most of our Olde English are derived from Germanic, Proto-Indo-European and Roman roots with some Welsh, Irish and Scottish thrown in to confuse the mix
The word stems from the Old English 'hrof'. The Old Dutch word was 'roef' and the Old Norse 'hrof' (the same as the Old English)
The Old English word forascan meaning to oppse, it related to Forsaken