Wednesday.
Woden: Wednesday
Wednesday aka Woden's Day Woden was one way of spelling Odin
Wednesday is named after Odin (Woden), meaning Woden's day.
Tuesday (Tiu's Day) Tiu is also known as Tyr. Wednesday (Woden's Day) Woden is also know as Odin. Thursday (Thor's Day) Friday (Freya's Day)
Thursday
Tuesday was named for Tyr, who was a Norse god of war. Odin, or Woden, was also considered a god of war - Wednesday was named for him.
Thursday - Thor's day Wednesday - Woden's day Tuesday - Tyr's day Friday - Freya's day
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.
An alternative form of the name was "Woden," which should make it fairly obvious: Wodensday -> Wednesday.
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).
Saturn is a viking goddess, and it is Saturday, named originally by the vikings for her.
The days of the week were named by men, not god or gods. Some were named after gods, such as Wednesday (Woden / Wotan's day), Thursday (Thor's day) and Friday (Frigga / Freya's day). This is true of many words in many languages.