释义 |
sun·day I. \ˈsəndē, -di also -n(ˌ)dā\ noun (-s) Usage: usually capitalized Etymology: Middle English sunnenday, sonnenday, sonday, sunday, from Old English sunnandæg; akin to Old Frisian sunnandei Sunday, Old Saxon sunnundag, Old High German sunnūn tag, Old Norse sunnudagr, sunnundagr; all from a prehistoric West Germanic-North Germanic compound formed from components represented by Old English sunne sun and dæg day; translation of Latin dies solis, translation of Greek hēmera hēliou — more at sun, day 1. : the first day of the week regarded by most Christians as a day for rest from secular employments and for public religious worship : the Christian Sabbath kept as a weekly commemoration of the day of Christ's resurrection and as the Christian analogue of the Jewish Sabbath 2. : a newspaper circulated on Sunday II. adjective Usage: usually capitalized 1. : of, relating to, or associated with Sunday 2. : best < Sunday manners > < his new white Sunday suit — Eudora Welty > 3. : engaging in a pursuit only on Sundays or in spare time : amateur, dilettante < Sunday painters multiply — J.D.Adams > < got behind a Sunday driver who was poking along admiring the scenery > III. intransitive verb (-ed/-ing/-s) Usage: usually capitalized : to spend Sunday : engage in Sunday activities < the religion … is Seventh Day Adventist and you do your Sundaying on Saturday — Julien Hyer > |