Home

Dúg

Dæg is the Old English noun meaning day, the daylight portion of a 24-hour cycle, or, more generally, a calendar day. It is the source of the modern English word day. In Old English, dæg was a masculine noun, and it occurs in many compound words and idioms. The term also formed the basis of the days of the week in Old English, including forms that translate to Moon's day and days named after deities.

The word derives from Proto-Germanic *dagaz, related to Old Norse dagr, Dutch dag, German Tag, and Gothic

In modern usage, the Old English form survives mainly in historical and linguistic discussion. The everyday

dags.
This
lineage
traces
back
to
a
Proto-Indo-European
root
associated
with
the
light
of
day
and
the
daily
cycle.
In
Middle
English
and
Early
Modern
English,
dæg
developed
into
the
modern
word
day
through
phonetic
and
orthographic
changes.
English
term
day
has
replaced
it
for
ordinary
reference
to
the
24-hour
period,
while
dæg
remains
important
in
studies
of
the
language’s
history
and
in
discussions
of
calendars
and
timekeeping.