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Saturday

Saturday is the day of the week between Friday and Sunday. No later than the 2nd century, the Romans named Saturday diēs Sāturnī ("Saturn's Day") for the planet Saturn, which controlled the first hour of that day, according to Vettius Valens.[1][2] The day's name was introduced into West Germanic languages and is recorded in the Low German languages such as Middle Low German satersdach, saterdach, Middle Dutch saterdag (Modern Dutch zaterdag) and Old English Sæternesdæġ, Sæterndæġ or Sæterdæġ.[3]

Saturnus, Caravaggio, 16th century

Origins

 
Saturday is named after the planet Saturn, which in turn was named after the Roman god Saturn

Between the 1st and 3rd centuries AD, the Roman Empire gradually replaced the eight-day Roman nundinal cycle with the seven-day week. The astrological order of the days was explained by Vettius Valens and Dio Cassius (and Chaucer gave the same explanation in his Treatise on the Astrolabe). According to these authors, it was a principle of astrology that the heavenly bodies presided, in succession, over the hours of the day. The association of the weekdays with the respective deities is thus indirect, the days are named for the planets, which were in turn named for the deities.

The Germanic peoples adapted the system introduced by the Romans but glossed their indigenous gods over the Roman deities in a process known as interpretatio germanica. In the case of Saturday, however, the Roman name was borrowed directly by West Germanic peoples, apparently because none of the Germanic gods were considered to be counterparts of the Roman god Saturn. Otherwise Old Norse and Old High German did not borrow the name of the Roman god (Icelandic laugardagur, German Samstag).

In the Eastern Orthodox Church, Saturdays are days on which the Theotokos (Mother of God) and All Saints are commemorated, and the day on which prayers for the dead are especially offered, in remembrance that it was on a Saturday that Jesus lay dead in the tomb. The Octoechos contains hymns on these themes, arranged in an eight-week cycle, that are chanted on Saturdays throughout the year. At the end of services on Saturday, the dismissal begins with the words: "May Christ our True God, through the intercessions of his most-pure Mother, of the holy, glorious and right victorious Martyrs, of our reverend and God-bearing Fathers…". For the Orthodox, Saturday — with the sole exception of Holy Saturday — is never a strict fast day. When a Saturday falls during one of the fasting seasons (Great Lent, Nativity Fast, Apostles' Fast, Dormition Fast) the fasting rules are always lessened to an extent. The Great Feast of the Exaltation of the Cross and the Beheading of St. John the Baptist are normally observed as strict fast days, but if they fall on a Saturday or Sunday, the fast is lessened.

Name and associations

Today, Saturday has two names in modern Standard German. The first word, Samstag, is always used in Austria, Liechtenstein, and the German-speaking part of Switzerland, and generally used in southern and western Germany. It derives from Old High German sambaztac, the first part (sambaz) of which derives from Greek Σάββατο, sávvato and this Greek word derives from Hebrew שבת, Shabbat. However, the current German word for Sabbath is Sabbat. The second name for Saturday in German is Sonnabend, which derives from Old High German sunnunaband, and is closely related to the Old English word sunnanæfen. It means literally "Sun eve", i.e., "The day before Sunday". Sonnabend is generally used in northern and eastern Germany, and was also the official name for Saturday in East Germany. Even if these two names are used regionally differently, they are usually understood at least passively in the other part.

In West Frisian there are also two words for Saturday. In Wood Frisian it is saterdei, and in Clay Frisian it is sneon, derived from snjoen, a combination of Old Frisian sunne, meaning sun and joen, meaning eve.

In the Westphalian dialects of Low Saxon, in East Frisian Low Saxon and in the Saterland Frisian language, Saturday is called Satertag, also akin to Dutch zaterdag, which has the same linguistic roots as the English word Saturday. It was formerly thought that the English name referred to a deity named Sætere who was venerated by the pre-Christian peoples of north-western Germany, some of whom were the ancestors of the Anglo-Saxons. Sætere was identified as either a god associated with the harvest of possible Slav origin,[4] or another name for Loki[5] a complex deity associated with both good and evil; this latter suggestion may be due to Jacob Grimm.[6] However, modern dictionaries derive the name from Saturn.[7][8][9][10]

In most languages of India, Saturday is Shanivāra, vāra meaning day, based on Shani, the Vedic god manifested in the planet Saturn. In the Thai solar calendar of Thailand, the day is named from the Pali word for Saturn, and the color associated with Saturday is purple.[citation needed] In Pakistan, Saturday is Hafta, meaning the week. In Eastern Indian languages like Bengali Saturday is called শনিবার, Shonibar meaning Saturn's Day and is the first day of the Bengali Week in the Bengali calendar. In Islamic countries, Fridays are considered as the last or penultimate day of the week and are holidays along with Thursdays or Saturdays; Saturday is called سبت, Sabt (cognate to Sabbath) and it is the first day of the week in many Arab countries but the Last Day in other Islamic countries such as Indonesia, Malaysia, Brunei, Central Asian countries.

In Japanese, the word Saturday is 土曜日, doyōbi, meaning 'soil day' and is associated with 土星, dosei: Saturn (the planet), literally meaning "soil star". Similarly, in Korean the word Saturday is 토요일, tho yo il, also meaning earth day. The element Earth was associated with the planet Saturn in Chinese astrology and philosophy.

The modern Māori name for Saturday, rāhoroi, literally means "washing-day" – a vestige of early colonized life when Māori converts would set aside time on the Saturday to wash their whites for Church on Sunday.[11] A common alternative Māori name for Saturday is the transliteration hātarei.

Quakers traditionally referred to Saturday as "Seventh Day", eschewing the "pagan" origin of the name.[12]

In Scandinavian countries, Saturday is called lördag, lørdag, or laurdag, the name being derived from the old word laugr/laug (hence Icelandic name Laugardagur), meaning bath, thus Lördag equates to bath-day. This is due to the Viking practice of bathing on Saturdays.[13] The roots lör, laugar and so forth are cognate to the English word lye, in the sense of detergent. The Finnish and Estonian names for the day, lauantai and laupäev, respectively, are also derived from this term.

Position in the week

The international standard ISO 8601 sets Saturday as the sixth day of the week. The three Abrahamic religions (Judaism, Christianity, and Islam) regard Saturday as the seventh day of the week. As a result, many refused the ISO 8601 standards and continue to use Saturday as their seventh day.

Saturday Sabbath

For Jews, Messianics, Seventh Day Baptists and Seventh-day Adventists, the seventh day of the week, known as Shabbat (or Sabbath for Seventh-day Adventists), stretches from sundown Friday to nightfall Saturday and is the day of rest. Roman Catholic and Eastern Orthodox churches distinguish between Saturday (Sabbath) and the Lord's Day (Sunday). Other Protestant groups, such as Seventh-day Adventists, hold that the Lord's Day is the Sabbath, according to the fourth commandment (Exodus 20:8), and not Sunday.

But the seventh day is the sabbath of the Lord thy God: in it thou shalt not do any work.

— Exodus 20:10 King James Version

Astrology

In astrology, Saturn is associated with Saturday, its planet's symbol  , and the astrological signs Capricorn and Aquarius.

In popular culture

Regional customs

Slang

  • The amount of criminal activities that take place on Saturday nights has led to the expression, "Saturday night special", a pejorative slang term used in the United States and Canada for any inexpensive handgun.

Arts, entertainment, and media

Comics and periodicals

Films

Folk rhymes and folklore

  • In the folk rhyme Monday's Child, "Saturday's child works hard for a living".
  • In another rhyme reciting the days of the week, Solomon Grundy "Died on Saturday".
  • In folklore, Saturday was the preferred day to hunt vampires, because on that day they were restricted to their coffins. It was also believed in the Balkans that someone born on Saturday could see a vampire when it was otherwise invisible, and that such people were particularly apt to become vampire hunters.[20][21] Accordingly, in this context, people born on Saturday were specially designated as sabbatianoí in Greek[22] and sâbotnichavi in Bulgarian;[21] the term has been rendered in English as "Sabbatarians".[22]

Music

Groups
Songs

Television

Video Games

Sports

See also

References

  1. ^ Falk, Michael (June 1999), "Astronomical Names for the Days of the Week", Journal of the Royal Astronomical Society of Canada, 93: 122–133, Bibcode:1999JRASC..93..122F
  2. ^ Vettius Valens (2010) [150–175], Anthologies (PDF), translated by Riley, Mark, Sacramento State, pp. 11–12
  3. ^ Hoad, TF, ed. (1993). The Concise Oxford Dictionary of English Etymology. Oxford University Press. p. 418a. ISBN 0-19-283098-8.
  4. ^ Palgrave, Francis, History of the Anglo-Saxons (1876), William Tegg & Co., London p.43
  5. ^ Couzens, Reginald C., The Stories of the Months and Days (1923), ch.22
  6. ^ Grimm, Jacob, Teutonic Mythology (1835), translated by James Steven Stallybrass in 1882 from Deutsche Mythologie, George Bell, London, p. 247.
  7. ^ "Saturday", Oxford English Dictionary, Third Edition (2008).
  8. ^ "Saturday", Merriam-Webster Dictionary (2013).
  9. ^ "Saturday", American Heritage Dictionary, Fifth Edition (2011).
  10. ^ "Saturday". Online Etymology Dictionary, accessed 2013.
  11. ^ Rāhoroi - Saturday, Kupu o te Rā
  12. ^ "Guide to Quaker Calendar Names". Iowa Yearly Meeting (Conservative) Religious Society of Friends (Quakers). Retrieved 30 March 2017. In the 20th Century, many Friends began accepting use of the common date names, feeling that any pagan meaning has been forgotten. The numerical names continue to be used, however, in many documents and more formal situations."
  13. ^ Wolf, Kirsten, 1959– (2018). The Vikings : facts and fictions. Mueller-Vollmer, Tristan. Santa Barbara, California. ISBN 9781440862984. OCLC 1035771932.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  14. ^ "Electoral Act 1992, s.100–101". www6.austlii.edu.au. 1992. Retrieved 19 February 2019.
  15. ^ (PDF). knesset.gov.il. 19 July 2018. Archived from the original (PDF) on 27 February 2019. Retrieved 19 February 2019.
  16. ^ "Holidays in Nepal". bharatonline.com. Retrieved 19 February 2019.
  17. ^ "Electoral Act 1993, section 139(1)(b)". www.legislation.govt.nz. 1993. Retrieved 19 February 2019.
  18. ^ Mildner, Anders (26 January 2014). "Godis är inget vi skojar om" [Candy is nothing we joke about]. Sydsvenskan (in Swedish). Malmö, Sweden. Retrieved 19 February 2019.
  19. ^ "State of Louisiana Election Code, §402. Dates of primary and general elections" (PDF). www.sos.la.gov. 2018. pp. 91–93. Retrieved 19 February 2019.
  20. ^ McClelland, Bruce A. (2006). Slayers and Their Vampires: A Cultural History of Killing the Dead. University of Michigan. pp. 62–79. ISBN 978-0-472-06923-1.
  21. ^ a b Димитрова, Иваничка (1983). (in Bulgarian). Archived from the original on 2016-03-08.
  22. ^ a b Abbott, George F. (1903). "Macedonian Folklore". Nature. 69 (1780): 221–222. Bibcode:1903Natur..69Q.125.. doi:10.1038/069125a0. S2CID 3987217. In Summers, Montague (2008) [1929]. The Vampire: His Kith and Kin. Forgotten Books. p. 36. ISBN 9781605065663.
  23. ^ Silverman, Jerry (1993). Songs That Made History Around the World. Mel Bay. p. 62. ISBN 978-1-56222-585-8. Retrieved 2012-07-30.

saturday, other, uses, disambiguation, sábado, redirects, here, portuguese, news, magazine, sábado, magazine, week, between, friday, sunday, later, than, century, romans, named, diēs, sāturnī, saturn, planet, saturn, which, controlled, first, hour, that, accor. For other uses see Saturday disambiguation Sabado redirects here For the Portuguese news magazine see Sabado magazine Saturday is the day of the week between Friday and Sunday No later than the 2nd century the Romans named Saturday dies Saturni Saturn s Day for the planet Saturn which controlled the first hour of that day according to Vettius Valens 1 2 The day s name was introduced into West Germanic languages and is recorded in the Low German languages such as Middle Low German satersdach saterdach Middle Dutch saterdag Modern Dutch zaterdag and Old English Saeternesdaeġ Saeterndaeġ or Saeterdaeġ 3 Saturnus Caravaggio 16th century Contents 1 Origins 2 Name and associations 3 Position in the week 4 Saturday Sabbath 5 Astrology 6 In popular culture 6 1 Regional customs 6 2 Slang 6 3 Arts entertainment and media 6 3 1 Comics and periodicals 6 3 2 Films 6 3 3 Folk rhymes and folklore 6 3 4 Music 6 3 5 Television 6 3 6 Video Games 6 4 Sports 7 See also 8 ReferencesOriginsSee also Names of the days of the week Saturday is named after the planet Saturn which in turn was named after the Roman god Saturn Between the 1st and 3rd centuries AD the Roman Empire gradually replaced the eight day Roman nundinal cycle with the seven day week The astrological order of the days was explained by Vettius Valens and Dio Cassius and Chaucer gave the same explanation in his Treatise on the Astrolabe According to these authors it was a principle of astrology that the heavenly bodies presided in succession over the hours of the day The association of the weekdays with the respective deities is thus indirect the days are named for the planets which were in turn named for the deities The Germanic peoples adapted the system introduced by the Romans but glossed their indigenous gods over the Roman deities in a process known as interpretatio germanica In the case of Saturday however the Roman name was borrowed directly by West Germanic peoples apparently because none of the Germanic gods were considered to be counterparts of the Roman god Saturn Otherwise Old Norse and Old High German did not borrow the name of the Roman god Icelandic laugardagur German Samstag In the Eastern Orthodox Church Saturdays are days on which the Theotokos Mother of God and All Saints are commemorated and the day on which prayers for the dead are especially offered in remembrance that it was on a Saturday that Jesus lay dead in the tomb The Octoechos contains hymns on these themes arranged in an eight week cycle that are chanted on Saturdays throughout the year At the end of services on Saturday the dismissal begins with the words May Christ our True God through the intercessions of his most pure Mother of the holy glorious and right victorious Martyrs of our reverend and God bearing Fathers For the Orthodox Saturday with the sole exception of Holy Saturday is never a strict fast day When a Saturday falls during one of the fasting seasons Great Lent Nativity Fast Apostles Fast Dormition Fast the fasting rules are always lessened to an extent The Great Feast of the Exaltation of the Cross and the Beheading of St John the Baptist are normally observed as strict fast days but if they fall on a Saturday or Sunday the fast is lessened Name and associationsToday Saturday has two names in modern Standard German The first word Samstag is always used in Austria Liechtenstein and the German speaking part of Switzerland and generally used in southern and western Germany It derives from Old High German sambaztac the first part sambaz of which derives from Greek Sabbato savvato and this Greek word derives from Hebrew שבת Shabbat However the current German word for Sabbath is Sabbat The second name for Saturday in German is Sonnabend which derives from Old High German sunnunaband and is closely related to the Old English word sunnanaefen It means literally Sun eve i e The day before Sunday Sonnabend is generally used in northern and eastern Germany and was also the official name for Saturday in East Germany Even if these two names are used regionally differently they are usually understood at least passively in the other part In West Frisian there are also two words for Saturday In Wood Frisian it is saterdei and in Clay Frisian it is sneon derived from snjoen a combination of Old Frisian sunne meaning sun and joen meaning eve In the Westphalian dialects of Low Saxon in East Frisian Low Saxon and in the Saterland Frisian language Saturday is called Satertag also akin to Dutch zaterdag which has the same linguistic roots as the English word Saturday It was formerly thought that the English name referred to a deity named Saetere who was venerated by the pre Christian peoples of north western Germany some of whom were the ancestors of the Anglo Saxons Saetere was identified as either a god associated with the harvest of possible Slav origin 4 or another name for Loki 5 a complex deity associated with both good and evil this latter suggestion may be due to Jacob Grimm 6 However modern dictionaries derive the name from Saturn 7 8 9 10 In most languages of India Saturday is Shanivara vara meaning day based on Shani the Vedic god manifested in the planet Saturn In the Thai solar calendar of Thailand the day is named from the Pali word for Saturn and the color associated with Saturday is purple citation needed In Pakistan Saturday is Hafta meaning the week In Eastern Indian languages like Bengali Saturday is called শন ব র Shonibar meaning Saturn s Day and is the first day of the Bengali Week in the Bengali calendar In Islamic countries Fridays are considered as the last or penultimate day of the week and are holidays along with Thursdays or Saturdays Saturday is called سبت Sabt cognate to Sabbath and it is the first day of the week in many Arab countries but the Last Day in other Islamic countries such as Indonesia Malaysia Brunei Central Asian countries In Japanese the word Saturday is 土曜日 doyōbi meaning soil day and is associated with 土星 dosei Saturn the planet literally meaning soil star Similarly in Korean the word Saturday is 토요일 tho yo il also meaning earth day The element Earth was associated with the planet Saturn in Chinese astrology and philosophy The modern Maori name for Saturday rahoroi literally means washing day a vestige of early colonized life when Maori converts would set aside time on the Saturday to wash their whites for Church on Sunday 11 A common alternative Maori name for Saturday is the transliteration hatarei Quakers traditionally referred to Saturday as Seventh Day eschewing the pagan origin of the name 12 In Scandinavian countries Saturday is called lordag lordag or laurdag the name being derived from the old word laugr laug hence Icelandic name Laugardagur meaning bath thus Lordag equates to bath day This is due to the Viking practice of bathing on Saturdays 13 The roots lor laugar and so forth are cognate to the English word lye in the sense of detergent The Finnish and Estonian names for the day lauantai and laupaev respectively are also derived from this term Position in the weekSee also Gregorian calendar The international standard ISO 8601 sets Saturday as the sixth day of the week The three Abrahamic religions Judaism Christianity and Islam regard Saturday as the seventh day of the week As a result many refused the ISO 8601 standards and continue to use Saturday as their seventh day Saturday SabbathSee also Shabbat Sabbath in seventh day churches and Sabbath in Christianity For Jews Messianics Seventh Day Baptists and Seventh day Adventists the seventh day of the week known as Shabbat or Sabbath for Seventh day Adventists stretches from sundown Friday to nightfall Saturday and is the day of rest Roman Catholic and Eastern Orthodox churches distinguish between Saturday Sabbath and the Lord s Day Sunday Other Protestant groups such as Seventh day Adventists hold that the Lord s Day is the Sabbath according to the fourth commandment Exodus 20 8 and not Sunday But the seventh day is the sabbath of the Lord thy God in it thou shalt not do any work Exodus 20 10 King James VersionAstrologyMain article Saturn astrology In astrology Saturn is associated with Saturday its planet s symbol and the astrological signs Capricorn and Aquarius In popular cultureThis section possibly contains original research Please improve it by verifying the claims made and adding inline citations Statements consisting only of original research should be removed January 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message Regional customs In most countries Saturday is a weekend day see workweek In Australia elections must take place on a Saturday 14 In Israel Saturday is the official day of rest 15 on which all government offices and most businesses including some public transportation are closed In Nepal Saturday is the last day of the week and is the only official weekly holiday 16 In New Zealand Saturday is the only day on which elections can be held 17 In Sweden and Norway Saturday has usually been the only day of the week when especially younger children are allowed to eat sweets lordagsgodis in Swedish and lordagsgodtteri in Norwegian This tradition was introduced to limit dental caries utilizing the results of the infamous Vipeholm experiments between 1945 1955 18 See festivities in Sweden In the U S state of Louisiana Saturday is the preferred election day 19 Slang The amount of criminal activities that take place on Saturday nights has led to the expression Saturday night special a pejorative slang term used in the United States and Canada for any inexpensive handgun Arts entertainment and media Comics and periodicals Saturday Morning Breakfast Cereal is a single panel webcomic by Zach Weiner The Saturday Evening Post Saturday Night magazine Canada Saturday Night Magazine U S Films The association of Saturday night with comedy shows on television lent its name to the film Mr Saturday Night starring Billy Crystal It is common for clubs bars and restaurants to be open later on Saturday night than on other nights Thus Saturday Night has come to imply the party scene and has lent its name to the films Saturday Night Fever which showcased New York discotheques Uptown Saturday Night as well as many songs see below Folk rhymes and folklore In the folk rhyme Monday s Child Saturday s child works hard for a living In another rhyme reciting the days of the week Solomon Grundy Died on Saturday In folklore Saturday was the preferred day to hunt vampires because on that day they were restricted to their coffins It was also believed in the Balkans that someone born on Saturday could see a vampire when it was otherwise invisible and that such people were particularly apt to become vampire hunters 20 21 Accordingly in this context people born on Saturday were specially designated as sabbatianoi in Greek 22 and sabotnichavi in Bulgarian 21 the term has been rendered in English as Sabbatarians 22 Music GroupsThe Saturdays is a female pop groupSongsThe Nigerian popular song Bobo Waro Fero Satodeh Everybody Loves Saturday Night became internationally famous in the 1950s and was sung translated into many languages 23 Saturday Fall Out Boy song from the album Take This to Your Grave Saturday Kids in Glass Houses song from the album Smart Casual Saturday in the Park is a song by Chicago Saturday Night is a song by the Misfits from Famous Monsters Saturday Night s Alright for Fighting is an Elton John song One More Saturday Night is a Grateful Dead song Television Saturday morning is a notable television time block aimed at children while generally airing animated cartoons although in the United States this has generally been phased out due to American television regulations requiring educational content be aired along with Saturday outside activities for children citation needed Saturday night is also a popular time slot for comedy shows on television in the US The most famous of these is Saturday Night Live a sketch comedy show that has aired on NBC nearly every week since 1975 Other notable examples include Saturday Night Live with Howard Cosell The Grand Final of the popular pan European TV show Eurovision Song Contest has always aired on a Saturday in May Saturday evenings are a time slot in the United Kingdom devoted to popular TV shows such as Strictly Come Dancing The Voice UK and The X Factor Many family game shows for example Total Wipeout and Hole in the Wall also air on a Saturday evening Video Games Saturday Night Slam Masters Published by Capcom Wrestling 1993 video game Saturday Morning RPGSports In the United Kingdom Saturday is the day most domestic fixtures of football are played In the United States most regular season college football games are played on Saturday Saturday is also a common day for college basketball games See alsoAfter Saturday comes Sunday Black Saturday bushfires a series of bushfires in Victoria Australia First Saturday Devotions a day to honor Our Lady of Fatima Holy Saturday the day before Easter Lazarus Saturday the day before Palm Sunday part of the Holy Week Working SaturdayReferences Wikimedia Commons has media related to Saturday Wikiquote has quotations related to Saturday Look up Saturday in Wiktionary the free dictionary Falk Michael June 1999 Astronomical Names for the Days of the Week Journal of the Royal Astronomical Society of Canada 93 122 133 Bibcode 1999JRASC 93 122F Vettius Valens 2010 150 175 Anthologies PDF translated by Riley Mark Sacramento State pp 11 12 Hoad TF ed 1993 The Concise Oxford Dictionary of English Etymology Oxford University Press p 418a ISBN 0 19 283098 8 Palgrave Francis History of the Anglo Saxons 1876 William Tegg amp Co London p 43 Couzens Reginald C The Stories of the Months and Days 1923 ch 22 Grimm Jacob Teutonic Mythology 1835 translated by James Steven Stallybrass in 1882 from Deutsche Mythologie George Bell London p 247 Saturday Oxford English Dictionary Third Edition 2008 Saturday Merriam Webster Dictionary 2013 Saturday American Heritage Dictionary Fifth Edition 2011 Saturday Online Etymology Dictionary accessed 2013 Rahoroi Saturday Kupu o te Ra Guide to Quaker Calendar Names Iowa Yearly Meeting Conservative Religious Society of Friends Quakers Retrieved 30 March 2017 In the 20th Century many Friends began accepting use of the common date names feeling that any pagan meaning has been forgotten The numerical names continue to be used however in many documents and more formal situations Wolf Kirsten 1959 2018 The Vikings facts and fictions Mueller Vollmer Tristan Santa Barbara California ISBN 9781440862984 OCLC 1035771932 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Electoral Act 1992 s 100 101 www6 austlii edu au 1992 Retrieved 19 February 2019 Basic Law Israel the Nation State of the Jewish People PDF knesset gov il 19 July 2018 Archived from the original PDF on 27 February 2019 Retrieved 19 February 2019 Holidays in Nepal bharatonline com Retrieved 19 February 2019 Electoral Act 1993 section 139 1 b www legislation govt nz 1993 Retrieved 19 February 2019 Mildner Anders 26 January 2014 Godis ar inget vi skojar om Candy is nothing we joke about Sydsvenskan in Swedish Malmo Sweden Retrieved 19 February 2019 State of Louisiana Election Code 402 Dates of primary and general elections PDF www sos la gov 2018 pp 91 93 Retrieved 19 February 2019 McClelland Bruce A 2006 Slayers and Their Vampires A Cultural History of Killing the Dead University of Michigan pp 62 79 ISBN 978 0 472 06923 1 a b Dimitrova Ivanichka 1983 Blgarska narodna mitologiya in Bulgarian Archived from the original on 2016 03 08 a b Abbott George F 1903 Macedonian Folklore Nature 69 1780 221 222 Bibcode 1903Natur 69Q 125 doi 10 1038 069125a0 S2CID 3987217 In Summers Montague 2008 1929 The Vampire His Kith and Kin Forgotten Books p 36 ISBN 9781605065663 Silverman Jerry 1993 Songs That Made History Around the World Mel Bay p 62 ISBN 978 1 56222 585 8 Retrieved 2012 07 30 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Saturday amp oldid 1131174786, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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