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why are two weeks called a fortnight
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.When i was at school i always remember a history teacher telling us that the word 'fortnight' dates from Norman times. When a castle or fort would be sieged, the enemy would surround it, and those persons locked inside would have to fend off the aggressors until all supplies of food and ammunition ran out. This could take several weeks, if not months to achieve. Therefore, it became barrack-humour that anyone sent to defend a stronghold would be off to 'spend a fort-night'.
I don't know if there's any truth in this, but i love the story!
I don't know if there's any truth in this, but i love the story!
My Concise Oxford English Dictionary tells me that *fortnight* comes from the Old English feowertiene niht which means fourteen nights...
I wonder why we use *week* for 7 days/nights instead of the Old English seofon nihta which became *sennight* and is listed as being archaic in the same dictionary.
I wonder why we use *week* for 7 days/nights instead of the Old English seofon nihta which became *sennight* and is listed as being archaic in the same dictionary.