Why is daytime called "daytime"?
Why is daytime called "daytime"?
Daytime: Refers to the period of time from dawn to dark. Pen, fun, and www.biquge.info
"Daytime": refers to the specific phenomenon of the day
This may seem like a geographical question, but it is actually a philosophical one. This question is similar to chicken or egg, but with differences.
I explain the question of chicken or egg first: the egg comes first and then the chicken, because the chicken is an oviparous animal. Before the formation of the species "chicken", there were oviparous animals, so there were eggs first and then chickens.
As for the phenomenon of daytime and the term "day", my answer is that matter determines consciousness, first there is day, and then there is "day".
As for why daytime is called "daytime", this question may start with the culture of our country. White means bright, so daytime was supposed to mean bright sky, but because of the evolution of society, it ended up being a period of time from dawn to dark.
The above is my understanding, and below is the glyph explanation.
Interpret according to the subordinate glyphs. White willingness. The word from δΈΏ, from the day. "δΈΏ" means "no", written in the upper left corner of "day", which means "the sky before sunrise does not count", and the escape is "beginning (starting from sunrise)". "Day" refers to the sun. "δΈΏ" and "ζ₯" are combined to mean "the sky from sunrise (to sunset)".
All of the above are answers, and none of them are answers, and the answers are in your hearts
ββββββββββ
PS: Banknotes are starting to work part-time today, and it is more difficult to update them these days.
PS2: Mueller is beautiful