The days of the week according to The Bible are on the first day or day one, the 2nd day or day two etc until the 7th day or the sabbath which is the only day with a "Name." The other days are simply numbers or numbered. In English, the days of the week as the months of the year are named after pagan gods and roman emperors. Sun day, Moon day, Tues day, wedens day, thor's day, frias day, Saturn's day are the answers to the entire week and the specific answer to your question then would be fria, tues, weden or oden, and thor,. who are all Norse.
the months of the year were mostly roman gods or planets or emperors although originally greek, and obviously out of order, Jan-janus, march- mars, may, July-Julius, august-Augustus Caesar, sept(9) oct(9) nov(9) dec(10) so if December is the 10th month how come it is all of a sudden the 12th month? as you can see the early roman calendar had some serious issues and conflicts with both cristianity and common sense.
Sunday and Monday were named after the sun and the moon. Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, and Friday were named after Norse gods Tiu, Woden, Thor, and Frigg (or Frija), and Saturday was named after the Roman god Saturn.
Week days in English are named after Norse gods because English as a language, while it was later influenced by Greek, French and Latin, was a Germanic language (England was settled and conquored by the Angles and Saxons from what is now Germany) and the Norse are a branch of Germanic tribes. The larger Germanic tribes of central and northern Europe had similar gods albeit various spellings and pronunciations- Odin was spelled Woden hence Wednesday (Woden's Day).
Monday - day of the moon Tuesday - Tyr's day (a Norse god) Wednesday - Woden's day (a Norse god) Thursday - Thor's day (a Norse god) Friday - Frigg's day (a Norse goddess) Saturday - Saturn's day (a Roman god) Sunday - day of the sun In English, we call our days of the week after Saxon gods, apart from Saturday. The French call their days of the week after Roman gods. But the Saxon and Roman gods who look after the same day are the same type of god. The English 'Saturday' is called after a Roman god, not a Saxon one. In Scandinavia, the word for Saturday is Lordag. It is an ancient word meaning "bath". Apparently the Vikings took one bath a week and it was on Saturday, so they called it "bath day". Perhaps the Saxons didn't like baths, so they preferred to use the Roman day name! Wednesday is named for the Norse god Odin, Thursday is named after the god Thor, Friday is named after the god Frigg or Freya, Tuesday is named after the god Tyr. All of these are based on a Latin version with Roman gods. Thursday was named for the Norse weather god Thor.
Thursday
Thursday
The days of the week are in part named after Norse gods (and also after the sun and the moon, which are not Norse gods).
The days of the week are name after Norse gods. For example Thursday was named after the Norse god of thunder, Thor.
In English the day of the week are mostly named after the gods in Norse mythology. Monday is named after the moon. Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday and Friday is named after the gods in Norse mythology. Saturday is named after Saturn and Sunday is named after the sun.
The days of the week were named after gods from Norse mythology. For example, Thursday was originally "Thor's day", named after the god Thor.
Wednesday is named after Odin, Thursday is named after Thor, and Friday is named after Frigg.
Alot of planets are The days of the week except for SUN(sun's)day, MON(moon's)day. The rest are named for either Norse or Roman gods.
Sunday and Monday were named after the sun and the moon. Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, and Friday were named after Norse gods Tiu, Woden, Thor, and Frigg (or Frija), and Saturday was named after the Roman god Saturn.
The days of the week were named after Norse gods. For example Thursday is named after the Norse god of thunder, Thor. Friday is named after Freyya, goddess supposedly married to Odin.Saturday Sunday and Monday, named by the Romans after Saturn,Sun,and Moon.Tuesday is after the Norse god Tiw.Wednesday is Wodens day After the Romans left Britain the Norse invasions [Angles,Saxons, and Celts] began they changed the names of four days into the names of Norse gods,but left sat.sun.mon. as the Romans named them.Possibly because the Norse were every bit as aware as the Romans were of the vital role of the sun & the moon in their lives.Why Saturn was left I can only guess
None. All of the modern days of the week in English are named after celestial objects (sun, moon, Saturn) and Norse gods (Tyr, Woden/Odin, Thor and Freyja).
The situation is actually the other way around - the days of the week were named for the gods, the gods were not named for the days of the week. Sunday - sunnandaeg - the sun (sun day) Monday - monandaeg - the moon (moon day) Tuesday - tiwesdaeg - Tyr/Tiw Wednesday - wodnesday - Odin/Woden Thursday - thunresdaeg - Thor Friday - frigedaeg - Frigga Saturday is named after a Roman god, Saturn, not a Norse god.
are so not cool :-(
Week days in English are named after Norse gods because English as a language, while it was later influenced by Greek, French and Latin, was a Germanic language (England was settled and conquored by the Angles and Saxons from what is now Germany) and the Norse are a branch of Germanic tribes. The larger Germanic tribes of central and northern Europe had similar gods albeit various spellings and pronunciations- Odin was spelled Woden hence Wednesday (Woden's Day).