dies Veneris
Latin
Etymology
From diēs (“day”) and Veneris, genitive of Venus.
Pronunciation
- (Classical Latin) IPA(key): /ˈdi.eːs ˈu̯e.ne.ris/, [ˈd̪ieːs̠ ˈu̯ɛnɛrɪs̠]
- (modern Italianate Ecclesiastical) IPA(key): /ˈdi.es ˈve.ne.ris/, [ˈd̪iːes ˈvɛːneris]
Noun
diēs Veneris f (genitive diēī Veneris); fifth declension
Declension
Fifth-declension noun with an indeclinable portion.
Case | Singular | Plural |
---|---|---|
Nominative | diēs Veneris | diēs Veneris |
Genitive | diēī Veneris | diērum Veneris |
Dative | diēī Veneris | diēbus Veneris |
Accusative | diem Veneris | diēs Veneris |
Ablative | diē Veneris | diēbus Veneris |
Vocative | diēs Veneris | diēs Veneris |
Coordinate terms
- diēs hebdomadis
- diēs Dominica, diēs Dominicus, diēs Sōlis
- diēs Lūnae
- diēs Mārtis
- diēs Mercuriī
- diēs Iovis
- diēs Sabbatī, diēs Saturnī
Descendants
- Aragonese: viernes
- Aromanian: vinjiri
- Asturian: vienres
- Catalan: divendres
- Dalmatian: vindre
- Esperanto: vendredo
- Franco-Provençal: divendro, vendredi
- French: vendredi
- Friulian: vinars
- Galician: venres
- Ido: venerdio
- Italian: venerdì
- Ladin: vender
- Ladino: viernes
- Ligurian: venerdì
- Lombard: venerdé
- Norman: Véndrédi (Jersey)
- Lua error in Module:etymology/templates/descendant at line 303: Terms in appendix-only constructed languages may not be given as descendants.
- Occitan: divendres
- Old Galician-Portuguese: vernes
- Papiamentu: diabièrne, djabièrnè
- Piedmontese: vëner, vënner
- Romanian: vineri
- Romansch: venderdi, venderdis
- Sicilian: vènniri, venniridìa
- Spanish: viernes
- Tagalog: Biyernes
- Venetian: vènere, vénare
- Walloon: vénrdi, divénr
- Welsh: dydd Gwener