jour
jour
dies "day." The original form of "dies" was Proto-Indo-European *dyeu- "Jove," the Indo-European god of the bright sky. The name "Jove" (whence "jovial") is a descendant of this root, as is "Jupiter," originally a compound of *dyeu + *peter "father," i.e. father of Jove. The name of Diana, the Roman goddess of the moon, share the same origin, as does the name of the supreme Greek deity, Zeus. The same may be said of the word "deity" and most of the words borrowed from Latin referring to days, such as "diurnal," "diary," "journey," and "journal," the last two of which come to us via French journée "day".ruz (plv. rôc)
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fra. dans un seul jour/nuit : eng. in a single day : yak ruz/šab-e
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=> fra. (en) plein jour
jour
m gün, sutka; un ~ bir dəfə; chaque ~ hər gün; ~ de repos istirahət günü; dans quelques ~s bir neçə gündən sonra; quel ~ sommes-nous aujourd'hui? bu gün nə günüdür?