The second day of the week.
[Middle English, from Old English Mōnandæg (translation of Latin lūnae diēs, day of the moon) : mōnan, genitive of mōna, moon; see moon + dæg, day; see day.]
Mondays Mon'days adv.Did you mean: Monday, Rick Monday, Monday (first name), week, Kenny Monday, Carl Monday, Jon Monday, Rick Monday (baseball), Monday (family name), Licht
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Mon·day (mŭn'dē, -dā') ![]() |
| Devil's Dictionary: monday |
n.
In Christian countries, the day after the baseball game.
| Word Tutor: Monday |
If we could get the public as involved and as informed about politics as they are about Monday Night Football, we would not have as many problems.
— Carol G. Hanson
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Monday (pronounced /ˈmʌndeɪ, ˈmʌndi/ (
listen)) is the day of the week between Sunday and Tuesday.
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The English noun Monday derived sometime before 1200 from monedæi, which itself developed from Old English (around 1000) mōnandæg and mōndæg (literally meaning "moon's day"), which is cognate to other Germanic languages, including Old Frisian mōnadeig, Middle Low German and Middle Dutch mānendach (modern Dutch Maandag), Old High German mānetag (modern German Montag), and Old Norse mánadagr (Swedish and Norwegian nynorsk måndag. Danish and Norwegian bokmål mandag). The Germanic term is a Germanic interpretation of Latin lunae dies ("day of the moon").[1]
The Russian word, eschewing pagan names, is понедельник (poniediélnik), meaning "after holiday". In Turkish it is called "pazartesi", which means the day after Sunday. In most of the Indian Languages, the word for Monday is Somvar, with Soma being the Sanskrit name for the moon. The Japanese word for Monday is getsuyōbi (月曜日) which means day of the moon.
According to the Christian count, Sunday is the first day of the week. This is the standard format in the United States, Canada and Japan.
But in many other cultures, Monday is held to be the first day of the week. For example, Monday is xingqi yi (星期一) in Chinese, meaning day one of the week. The international standard ISO 8601 defines Monday as the first day of the week. Its name in Georgian and Syriac means "first day". Quakers traditionally refer to Monday as "Second Day" eschewing the pagan origin of the English name "Monday". For similar reasons the official liturgical calendar of the Roman Catholic Church refers to Monday as the second celebration day - Feria II. (The Portuguese and the Greek (Eastern Orthodox Church) name for Monday reflects this, as do all the days' names except Saturday and Sunday: the Portuguese word for Monday is segunda-feira and the Greek word is deutéra (Δευτέρα) ).
Modern culture usually looks at Monday as the beginning of the workweek, as it is typically Monday when adults go back to work and children back to school after the weekend. Thus, Mondays are often seen as a misfortune. In Middle Eastern countries, however, the beginning of the workweek is usually Saturday (Thursday and Friday are observed as the weekend). In Israel, Sunday is the first day of the workweek. Friday is half a work day and Friday night and Saturday are the Sabbath.
In Judaism and Islam Mondays are considered auspicious days for fasting. The Didache warned early Christians not to fast on Mondays to avoid Judaizing, and suggests Wednesdays instead.
In Judaism the Torah is read in public on Monday mornings, one of three days the Torah is read each week (the other two days being Thursday and Saturday). Special penitential prayers are recited on Monday, unless there is a special occasion for happiness which cancels them.
In the Eastern Orthodox Church Mondays are days on which the Angels are commemorated. The Octoechos contains hymns on this theme, arranged in an eight-week cycle, that are chanted on Mondays throughout the year. At the end of Divine Services on Monday, the dismissal begins with the words: "May Christ our True God, through the intercessions of his most-pure Mother, of the honorable, Bodiless Powers (i.e., the angels) of Heaven…". In many Eastern monasteries Mondays are observed as fast days; because Mondays are dedicated to the angels, and monks strive to live an angelic life. In these monasteries the monks abstain from meat, fowl, dairy products, fish, wine and oil (if a feast day occurs on a Monday, fish, wine and oil may be allowed, depending upon the particular feast).
In the folk rhyme, "Monday's child is fair of face".
In Thailand, the color associated with Monday is yellow, see Thai solar calendar.
The Boomtown Rats have a famous song called "I Don't Like Mondays".
Through the movie Office Space the quote "Someone is having a case of the Mondays!" entered the pop culture lexicon.
In the Garfield comics and shows, the titular cat hates Mondays, and is frequently harmed during them.
| Language | Pronunciation | Meaning | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Latin | dies lunae | Day of the moon | (literal translation) |
| Swedish | Måndag | Moon day | (literal translation) |
| Albanian | E Hene | Day of the moon | (literal translation) |
| Italian | lunedì | Day of the moon | (literal translation) |
| Galician | luns | Day of the moon | (literal translation) |
| Gaeilge | Dé Luain | Day of the moon | (literal translation) |
| Catalan | dilluns | Day of the moon | (literal translation) |
| Spanish | lunes | Day of the moon | (literal translation) |
| French | lundi | Day of the moon | (literal translation) |
| Norwegian | mandag | Moon Day | (literal translation) |
| Romanian | luni | Day of the moon | (literal translation) |
| Akan | Edwada | day of the moon | beginning of the week |
| German | Montag | Moon day | (literal translation) |
| Dutch | Maandag | Moon day | (literal translation) |
| English | Monday | Moon day | (literal translation) |
| Hungarian | hétfő | head of seven (=week) | beginning of the week |
| Russian | Понедельник Ponedel'nik |
after a holiday | (literal translation from Old Russian) |
| Polish | Poniedziałek | after Sunday | (literal translation) |
| Kashubian | Pòniedzôłk | after Sunday | (literal translation) |
| Tibetan | གཟའ་ཟླ་བ། | "planet moon" | (literal translation) |
| Khmer | ថ្ងៃច័ន្ទ tngae chan |
moon day | (literal translation) |
| Croatian | Ponedjeljak | after Sunday | (literal translation) |
| Bulgarian | Понеделник Ponedelnik |
after Sunday | (literal translation) |
| Ukrainian | Понеділок Ponedilok |
after Sunday | (literal translation) |
| Czech | pondělí | after Sunday | (literal translation) |
| Serbian | Понедељак / Ponedelyak | after Sunday | (literal translation) |
| Slovak | Pondelok | after Sunday | (literal translation) |
| Slovenian | Ponedeljek | after Sunday | (literal translation) |
| Kiswahili | Jumatatu | the third day | (almost literal translation) |
| Bosnian | Ponedjeljak | after Sunday | (literal translation) |
| Macedonian | Понеделник Ponedelnik |
after Sunday | (literal translation) |
| Turkish | Pazartesi | after Sunday | (literal translation) |
| Kurdish | dúschem | first day | (literal translation) |
| Greek | Δευτέρα deutéra |
the second (day) | (literal translation) |
| Arabic | الاثنين al-ithnayn |
the second(day) | (literal translation) |
| Armenian | Երկուշաբթի Yergoushapti |
the second (day) | (literal translation) |
| Persian | دوشنبه do-schambe |
the second day | (literal translation) |
| Hebrew | יום שני yom scheni |
the second day | (literal translation) |
| Portuguese | segunda-feira | second (liturgical) celebration | (literal translation) |
| Chinese | 禮拜一 星期一 libaiyi xingqiyi |
first day of the week | (literal translation) |
| Estonian | esmaspäev | first day of the week | (literal translation) |
| Japanese | 月曜日 getsuyôbi |
moon day | Japanese days are called by the names of celestial bodies, starting with sun and moon then five planets |
| Korean | 월요일 weolyoil |
moon day | Korean days are called by the names of five basic elements, the moon, and the Sun. |
| Hindi | सोमवार som-vaar |
day of Soma | The sacrament/deity Soma was associated with the moon, as the moon's waxing symbolized the cup of Soma filling. |
| Malayalam | തിങ്കളാഴ്ച thingka-lazhtcha |
day of the moon | (literal translation) |
| Lithuanian | Pirmadienis |
First Day | (literal translation) |
| Albanian | E hënë | First Day | (literal translation) |
| This section requires expansion. |
Monday aligns with the celestial body, the Moon, and the astrological sign of Cancer.
| Look up monday in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. |
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| Translations: Monday |
Dansk (Danish)
n. - mandag
adv. - på mandag, om mandagen
Français (French)
n. - lundi
adv. - le lundi
Deutsch (German)
n. - Montag
adv. - montags
Português (Portuguese)
n. - segunda-feira (f)
Español (Spanish)
n. - lunes
adv. - de los lunes
中文(简体)(Chinese (Simplified))
星期一, 在星期一
中文(繁體)(Chinese (Traditional))
n. - 星期一
adv. - 在星期一
한국어 (Korean)
n. - 월요일
adv. - 월요일에
日本語 (Japanese)
n. - 月曜日
adv. - 月曜日に
العربيه (Arabic)
(الاسم) يوم الاثنين
עברית (Hebrew)
n. - יום שני
adv. - ביום שני, בימי שני, בכל יום שני
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Did you mean: Monday, Rick Monday, Monday (first name), week, Kenny Monday, Carl Monday, Jon Monday, Rick Monday (baseball), Monday (family name), Licht
| Shrove Monday | |
| Mon. (abbreviation) | |
| Mondy (family name) |
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