Dies Veneris.
viernes
The name Friday comes from the Anglo Saxon form of "frigg" from the latin dies veneris "day (of the planet) venus".
monday=zora tuesday=tasia wednesday=wednasda thursday=thurtork friday=frihammador saturday=sathamornock sunday=sundanfasacuna
frost featuring don cisco kurupt soopafly mamacita
1st February 1991 was a Friday.
well Friday the 13th is on Friday the 13th
The days of the week are named after German deities, but the origin of their naming comes from the Romans nonetheless. You see, Friday comes from Freyja's (or Frigg's) Day. Freyja was the goddess of beauty to the Old Germans and Norse. With that in mind, in Latin, Friday is Dies Veneris, or Day of Venus. As we all know, Venus was the Roman goddess of Beauty. You can not similar trends for the other days of the week as well.
Friday, Next Friday, Friday After Next
friday
everybody has fun because its friday friday gotta get down on friday
You can differentiate between the two by saying -- this Friday or last Friday or not last Friday but the Friday before. Last Friday I went to visit Jack. This Friday Jack came to our house. Not last Friday but the Friday before I met Jack at the cafe. If you are talking about Fridays in the future you could say -- Not this Friday but next Friday
Dies Veneris means "day of Venus." This was adopted as the name for Friday when the Romans abandoned their old 8-day week in favor of the 7-day week. A number of modern European names for Friday derive from this phrase, including French vendredi, Spanish viernes and Italian venerdi.