The word "day" is one of the oldest and most fundamental terms in the English language, traceable to the earliest recorded forms of Old English. It appears as dæġ in texts from before the year 900, where it carried a double meaning that persists to this day: both the period of sunlight between dawn and dusk, and a full cycle of light and darkness constituting roughly 24 hours.
The Old English form descends from Proto-Germanic *dagaz, a masculine noun shared across the entire Germanic family. This is well attested by the cognates: German Tag, Dutch dag, Swedish and Danish dag, Norwegian dag, and Icelandic dagur, all meaning "day." The Gothic form, attested in the Bible translation of Wulfila (4th century CE), was dags. The consistency of the word across all Germanic branches
The deeper Proto-Indo-European etymology is less certain. The most widely cited proposal connects *dagaz to the PIE root *dʰegʷʰ-, meaning "to burn" or "to be hot." Under this analysis, the original concept behind the Germanic word for "day" was something like "the hot time" or "the burning time" — a reference to the heat and light that the sun brings during daylight hours. This root also produced Sanskrit
An alternative proposal links *dagaz to a different PIE root, *aǵʰ-, meaning "a day" or "a period of 24 hours," which is also the source of Latin diēs ("day") via the form *dyew- relating to the sky and brightness. However, the phonological correspondence between *aǵʰ- and Germanic *dagaz is problematic, and most modern handbooks favor the *dʰegʷʰ- connection or leave the deeper etymology uncertain.
In Old English, dæġ had a broader semantic range than its modern descendant. It could refer to an era, a lifetime, or an age — a sense preserved in fossilized expressions like "in my day" or "in the days of old." The plural dagas was frequently used to mean "lifetime" or "time on earth," as in the common Old English phrase "ealle his dagas" (all his days, i.e., his entire life).
The compound possibilities of "day" have been productive throughout English history. Old English already had dæġrēd ("dawn," literally "day-counsel"), and Middle English generated daylight, today (from Old English tō dæġe, "on this day"), and birthday. Modern English has continued the pattern with workday, everyday, and the metaphorical use in phrases like "day and night" meaning a stark contrast.
The measurement of the day itself has a complex cultural history intertwined with the word. The Germanic peoples originally reckoned time by nights rather than days — a practice reflected in the word "fortnight" (fourteen nights) and the fact that in Old English law and custom, events were dated by nights. The shift to counting by days reflects the influence of Roman and later Christian timekeeping conventions, where the Latin diēs provided the model for a day-centered calendar.
Across the Indo-European world, words for "day" tend to cluster around concepts of light, burning, and sky — testifying to the deep human instinct to name time by what the sun does. English "day," with its likely root in the idea of heat and burning, is a quiet monument to that instinct, carrying forward a metaphor coined millennia ago on the steppes where Proto-Indo-European was spoken.