- Wednesday
Wednesday is the fourth
day of the week [ [http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/wednesday wednesday - Definition from the Merriam-Webster Online Dictionary ] ] in most western countries. This day is betweenTuesday andThursday .Origins of the name
:"See
Days of the week for more on naming conventions."The name comes from the
Middle English "Wednes dei", which is fromOld English language "Wēdnes dæg", meaning the day of the English godWoden ("Wodan") who was a god of theAnglo-Saxons inEngland until about the 7th century. "Wēdnes dæg" is like theOld Norse "Oðinsdagr" ("Odin's day"), which is an early translation of theLatin "dies Mercurii" ("Mercury's day"), and reflects the widespread association of Woden with Mercury going back toTacitus .In
Romance languages it is derived from the name of the Roman god Mercury: "mercredi" (French), "mercoledì" (Italian), "miércoles" (Spanish), "miercuri" (Romanian), "dimecres" (Catalan), "dies Mercurii" (Latin). Similarly, in most of the Indian Languages the name for Wednesday, "Buddhavar" is derived from the Vedic name for Mercury, "Buddha". "Buddh" is also used inUrdu . Russian does not use pagan names but instead uses "sredá," meaning "middle," similar to the German "Mittwoch." Likewise, Portuguese uses the word "quarta-feira," meaning "fourth day."Position in the week
When Sunday is taken as the first of the week, the day in the middle of each week is Wednesday. Arising from this, the German name for Wednesday has been "Mittwoch" (literally: "mid-week") since the 10th Century, having displaced the former name: "Wodanstag" ("Wodan's day"). The Finnish name is similar: "Keskiviikko" (literally: "middle of the week") as is the Icelandic name: "Miðvikudagur" ("Mid-week day"). Wednesday is "sereda" in Ukrainian, which has the same word base as "seredyna", which is translated as "middle".
Wednesday is also in the middle of the common Western 5-day
workweek that starts on Monday and finishes on Friday.Religious observances
Quakers traditionally refer to Wednesday as "Fourth Day", eschewing the pagan origin of the name "Wednesday". Most eastern languages also use a name with this meaning, for much the same reason.
The
Eastern Orthodox Church observe Wednesday (as well as Friday) as afast day throughout the year (with the exception of several fast-free periods during the year). Fasting on Wednesday and Fridays entailsabstinence frommeat or meat products (i.e., four-footed animals),poultry anddairy products . Unless afeast day occurs on a Friday, the Orthodox also abstain fromfish , from using oil in their cooking and fromalcoholic beverages (there is some debate over whether abstention from oil involves allcooking oil or onlyolive oil ). For the Orthodox, Wednesdays and Fridays throughout the year commemorate theCrucifixion of Christ and theTheotokos (Mother of God ), especially as she stood by the foot of the cross. There are hymns in the Octoekhos which reflect this liturgically. These include special "Theotokia" (hymn s to the Mother of God) called "Stavrotheotokia" ("Cross-Theotokia"). Thedismissal at the end of services on Wednesday begins with these words: "May Christ our true God, through the power of the precious and life-giving cross...."Many
Protestant churches also have services or a Bible study on Wednesday. Some U.S. high schools have had a custom of scheduling sporting events on Monday and Thursday for girls' games, Tuesday and Friday for boys' games, and leave Wednesday evenings free partially for this reason.According to the
Hebrew Bible , Wednesday is the day when theSun andMoon were created.Cultural references
An
American English idiom for Wednesday is "hump day" a reference to making it through to the middle of the work week as getting "over the hump."In the folk rhyme, "Wednesday's child is full of woe". In another rhyme reciting the days of the week,
Solomon Grundy was 'Married on Wednesday.' In "Winnie the Pooh and the Blustery Day ", the disagreeable nature of the weather is attributed to it being "Winds-Day" (a play on "Wednesday"). InRichard Brautigan 's "In Watermelon Sugar " Wednesday is the day when the sun shines grey.Wednesday is used as a character's first or last name in several narrative works, including "
Thursday's fictions " byRichard James Allen ,Neil Gaiman 's novelAmerican Gods , and the 60's television show, The Addams Family.A song titled "Wednesday's Song" is on the 2004 album
Shadows Collide with People byJohn Frusciante , "Wednesday" is the title of a song on musicianTori Amos ' "Scarlet's Walk " album, and "Wednesday Mayday" is a piece of music from band Awaken on their albumTales Of Acid Ice Cream in 1996.According to the Thai solar calendar, the color associated with Wednesday is green.
Sheffield Wednesday Football Club are a professional football club based inSheffield ,Yorkshire ,England .In the film
Mean Girls , Amy Poehler's character makes the girls a "Hump Day Treat".Astrology
The astrological sign of the planet Mercury represents Wednesday -- "Dies Mercurii" to the Romans, with similar names in Latin-derived languages, such as the French Mercredi and the Spanish Miércoles. In English, this became "Woden's Day", since the Roman god Mercury was identified with Woden in
northern Europe .Named days
*
Ash Wednesday , the first day of Roman CatholicLent , occurs forty days beforeEaster , not counting Sundays.
*Spy Wednesday is an old name given to the Wednesday immediately precedingEaster , in allusion to the betrayal ofJesus byJudas Iscariot .References
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