In Spanish, the days of the week are: lunes (Monday), martes (Tuesday), mircoles (Wednesday), jueves (Thursday), viernes (Friday), sbado (Saturday), and domingo (Sunday). In French, they are: lundi, mardi, mercredi, jeudi, vendredi, samedi, and dimanche. In German, they are: Montag, Dienstag, Mittwoch, Donnerstag, Freitag, Samstag, and Sonntag.
Days of the week Months of the year Holidays Languages
Both "what days of the week" and "which days of the week" are correct; however, "which days of the week" is typically used when the choices are limited, while "what days of the week" is more open-ended.
The term for words from different languages is "loanwords."
The homophone for "7 days" is "week."
A person who speak different languages is called a Linguist.
The days of the week would be different in different languages.
They do not. Saturday is named after Saturn, a Roman god. The other days of the week are named after Norse gods.The above applies to the English names of the days. Other languages may have different histories.
In English the seven days of the week are named Sunday, Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, and Saturday. In Spanish the names of the days of the week are Domingo, Lunes, Martes, Miercoles, Jueves, Viernes, and Sabado They have different names in other languages.
No. The names of the days of the weeks and the names of month are different in different languages.
The days of the week on the planet Mercury have different names and lengths compared to Earth.
Different people have different working weeks and, within those days, different best and worst days. Also, the worst days may change from one week to another.
There is no language called "Asian". Asia consists of many different countries and many different languages, such as Korean, Chinese, Japanese, Laotian, Vietnamese, etc. Please specify which language you mean.
The Romans had no "Sundays" or any named days of the week. In fact they didn't even have weeks. Their reckoning of days and months was different from ours.The Romans had no "Sundays" or any named days of the week. In fact they didn't even have weeks. Their reckoning of days and months was different from ours.The Romans had no "Sundays" or any named days of the week. In fact they didn't even have weeks. Their reckoning of days and months was different from ours.The Romans had no "Sundays" or any named days of the week. In fact they didn't even have weeks. Their reckoning of days and months was different from ours.The Romans had no "Sundays" or any named days of the week. In fact they didn't even have weeks. Their reckoning of days and months was different from ours.The Romans had no "Sundays" or any named days of the week. In fact they didn't even have weeks. Their reckoning of days and months was different from ours.The Romans had no "Sundays" or any named days of the week. In fact they didn't even have weeks. Their reckoning of days and months was different from ours.The Romans had no "Sundays" or any named days of the week. In fact they didn't even have weeks. Their reckoning of days and months was different from ours.The Romans had no "Sundays" or any named days of the week. In fact they didn't even have weeks. Their reckoning of days and months was different from ours.
The names for days of the week derive from many languages and cultures. See Related Links.
Different webaites provide option to display week number in calendar.
The names of the days of the week are different in each language. You must specify a language before a useful answer can be provided.
This might be more apparent to speakers of languages other than English. There is a closer match in French, for example. It is not that planets are named after the days of the week. Both the days of the week and the planets are named after various deities that have been influential in human thought over the centuries.