jour

common noun

Syllable Decomposition

jour

from Latin diŭrnus (cf. diurne), an adjective that became a noun in Vulgar Latin in Gaul and Italy (in Italian, giorno), where it eliminated the classical dies, maintained in Iberia and Dacia (cf. Sp. día, Port. dia and Rom. zi). In Corsican, ghjornu is pronounced well diornu.

Definitions

métrologie
agriculture
peinture

Synonym

Antonym

Plural

jours

Translations

  • germangerman:Durchbrucharbeit
  • englishenglish:aperture
  • arabicarabic:يوم
  • chinesechinese:白天
  • koreankorean:
  • danishdanish:dag
  • spanishspanish:día
  • finnishfinnish:päivä
  • greekgreek:μέρα
  • hebrewhebrew:יום
  • italianitalian:luce
  • japanesejapanese:
  • dutchdutch:dag
  • polishpolish:dzień
  • portugueseportuguese:dia
  • russianrussian:день
  • swedishswedish:dag
  • turkishturkish:gündüz
  • ukrainianukrainian:день

See also

diaire (cn.) diaire (adj.) journalier (adj.) journalier (cn.) quotidien (adj.) diurne (adj.) biquotidien (adj.) Jours (pn.) quotidienneté (cn.)