Dies

Verb
dies



Noun
dies



Anagrams

 * Desi
 * ides
 * side

Etymology
A shortening of dieses

Pronoun
dies


 * 1) this

Etymology
. Cognate with Old Armenian տիւ:. Not related to English day (from Proto-Germanic *dagaz < Proto-Indo-European *dhegh- (“‘to burn’”)).

Noun

 * 1) day

Inflection
Diēs is an exceptional case of a fifth declension noun since it is both used in the masculine form and in the feminine form, instead of just feminine like the rest of the fifth declension nouns.

Derived terms

 * diēs hebdomadis
 * diēs Sōlis
 * diēs Lūnae
 * diēs Mārtis
 * diēs Mercuriī


 * diēs Iovis
 * diēs Veneris
 * diēs Sāturnī
 * hodiē
 * nūdius

Related terms

 * diurnus
 * merīdiēs

Descendants

 * Aromanian:
 * Asturian:
 * Breton:
 * Campidanese Sardinian:
 * Catalan:


 * Friulian:
 * Galician:
 * Istro-Romanian:
 * Italian:
 * Lombard:


 * Megleno-Romanian:
 * Portuguese:
 * Romansch:
 * Romanian:
 * Spanish:

Etymology
From dorsum:. Compare French dos:.

Noun

 * 1)  back

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