Blursday

noun
/ˈblɜːzdeɪ/UK/ˈblɜɹzˌdeɪ/US

Etymology

Blend of blur + Thursday, popularized during the COVID-19 pandemic (beginning 2020) due to periods of lockdown or remote work when people felt that days had become undistinguishable.

  1. derived from *Þunras dag
  2. derived from þórsdagr
  3. inherited from þursdæġ
  4. inherited from Thursday
  5. compounded as blursday — “blur + Thursday

Definitions

  1. A day of the week not easily distinguished from other days.

    • Blah-day, Blues-day or Blurs-day? Get your colors crystal clear at the Bass Museum.
    • Thursday – bit of a blursday
    • "Yeah, it's been a long day." Pausing, he looked up at the desert moon. "Say, what day is it, anyway?" / "Blursday, my friend, Every day is Blursday."

The neighborhood

Vish — recursive loop

No curated loop yet for Blursday. Loops are being traced one word at a time while the ingestion pipeline matures.

sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA