Tuesday: Difference between revisions

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==Common occurrences==
==Common occurrences==
===United States and Canada===
===United States and Canada===
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Tuesday is the usual day for [[election]]s in the [[United States]]. Federal elections take place on the Tuesday after the first Monday in November; this date was established by a law of 1845 for [[U.S. presidential election|presidential elections]] (specifically for the selection of the [[U.S. Electoral College|Electoral College]]), and was extended to elections for the [[United States House of Representatives|House of Representatives]] in 1875 and for the [[United States Senate|Senate]] in 1914. Tuesday was the earliest day of the week which was practical for polling in the early nineteenth century: citizens might have to travel for a whole day to cast their vote, and would not wish to leave on Sunday which was a day of worship for the great majority of them.


In the United States and Canada, most [[home video]] and audio releases for purchase or rental occur on Tuesdays. Since this policy began, there have been very few exceptions to this common release day.{{Facts|date=August 2007}}
==Named days==
==Named days==
*[[Wall Street Crash of 1929|Black Tuesday]], in the [[United States]], refers to [[October 29]], [[1929]], part of the great Stock Market Crash of 1929. This was the Tuesday after Black Thursday. The crash is said to have marked the start of the [[Great Depression]].
*[[Wall Street Crash of 1929|Black Tuesday]], in the [[United States]], refers to [[October 29]], [[1929]], part of the great Stock Market Crash of 1929. This was the Tuesday after Black Thursday. The crash is said to have marked the start of the [[Great Depression]].

Revision as of 18:15, 23 August 2009

The god Týr, identified with Mars, after whom Tuesday is named.

Tuesday (Template:Pron-en) is the day of the week between Monday and Wednesday.

Origins of the name

See Week-day names for more on naming conventions.

Planetary

The name comes from Middle English Tiwesday, from Old English Tiwes dæg, named after the Nordic god Tyr, who was the approximate equivalent of the Roman war god Mars, and Greek god Ares.

In Latin, it is called Martis dies which means "Mars's Day". In Romance languages the word for "Tuesday" is similar to the Latin name: mardi in French, martes in Spanish, martedì in Italian, dimarts in Catalan, and marţi in Romanian. But Portuguese, also a Romance language, uses the word terça-feira, meaning "third day of liturgical celebration", that comes from the Latin "feria tertia" used in religious texts where it was not allowed to consecrate days to pagan gods.

The surviving Celtic languages preserve the Latin names,[1] although none of these languages are descended from Latin. Tuesday is dé máirt in Irish, Meurzh in Breton,[2] dydd Mawrth in Welsh[3] and Dimàirt in Scottish Gaelic.[4][5][6]

The English and Scandinavian names are derived from the Nordic god Týr (Old English Tiw):

The German word Dienstag, as well as Low German Dingsdag, Deensdag and Dutch Dinsdag (from the 13th century, MHG dinsdag, dinsedag, dincetag, dinstag, dingstag) is probably due to interpretation as dies judicii (thing day) or dies census in popular etymology (Grimm). Another possibility is direct derivation from the god referred to by the Romans as Mars Thingsus, the god of the Thing,[7] who could likely be Tyr, as well.[8]

The speech of Old Bavaria, also from the 13th century, used ertag (erihtag, erehtag, erchtag, erichtag, erntag), from which Jacob Grimm in Deutsche Mythologie postulated Ear as an epithet of Ziu.[9]

In most of the Indian Languages as well as Nepali and Urdu the word for Tuesday is Mangalwar, with Mangala being the Sanskrit name for the planet Mars.

Numerical

Portuguese uses numbers instead of pagan names and so their word for "Tuesday" is terça-feira (the third day; Sunday [Domingo] is the first day of the liturgical week).

The Greek word for "Tuesday" is Triti meaning "third", counting Tuesday as the third day of the week.

The Hebrew word for "Tuesday" is Yom Shlishi (יום שלישי) meaning "third day", counting Tuesday as the third day of the week.

The Arabic word for "Tuesday" is yawm ath-thulaathaaʼ يوم الثلاثاء (Urdu, Mangl منگل) (Persian: Seh-Shanbeh, سه شنبه) meaning "third day", counting Tuesday as the third day of the week.

The Russian word for "Tuesday" is vtórnik, meaning "second"; that is, counting Tuesday as the second day of the week.

Quakers traditionally referred to Tuesday as "Third Day" eschewing the pagan origin of the English name "Tuesday". This has also been the custom in Iceland since about the 11th century when Jón Ögmundsson changed it to Þriðjudagur, meaning "Third Day".[citation needed]

Religious observances

In the Eastern Orthodox Church. Tuesdays are dedicated to Saint John the Baptist. The Octoechos contains hymns on this theme, arranged in an eight-week cycle, that are chanted on Tuesdays throughout the year. At the end of Divine Services on Tuesday, the dismissal begins with the words: "May Christ our True God, through the intercessions of his most-pure Mother, of the honorable and glorious Prophet, Forerunner and Baptist John…"

Cultural references

In the Greek world, Tuesday (the day of the week of the Fall of Constantinople) is considered an unlucky day. The same is true in the Spanish-speaking world, where a proverb runs: En martes, ni te cases ni te embarques, meaning, "On Tuesday, neither get married nor begin a journey." For both Greeks and Spanish-speakers, the 13th of the month is considered unlucky if it falls on Tuesday, instead of Friday. In Judaism, on the other hand, Tuesday is considered a particularly lucky day, because in the first chapter of Genesis the paragraph about this day contains the phrase "it was good" twice.

In the Thai solar calendar, the day is named for the Pali word for the planet Mars, which also means "Ashes of the Dead" [2]; the color associated with Tuesday is pink.

In the folk rhyme Monday's Child, "Tuesday's child is full of grace".

Common occurrences

United States and Canada

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Named days

Sources

  • Grimm, Jacob. 1875–78. Deutsche Mythologie. Fourth ed., curated by Elard Hugo Meyer, 3 vols. Berlin: F. Dümmler. Reprinted Darmstadt: Wissenschaftliche Buchgesellschaft, 1965.

References