week

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week

  (wēk) pronunciation
n.
    1. A period of seven days: a week of rain.
    2. (Abbr. wk.) A seven-day calendar period, especially one starting with Sunday and continuing through Saturday: this week.
    1. A week designated by an event or holiday occurring within it: commencement week.
    2. A week dedicated to a particular cause or institution: Home Safety Week.
  1. The part of a calendar week devoted to work, school, or business: working a three-day week.
    1. One week from a specified day: I'll see you Friday week.
    2. One week ago from a specified day: It was Friday week that we last met.

[Middle English weke, from Old English wicu.]


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period of time shorter than the month, commonly seven days. The ancient Egyptians used a 10-day period, as did the French under the short-lived French Revolutionary calendar. In many regions a four-day to eight-day market week is based on the recurrence of market days; the early Romans observed an eight-day market week. This period also corresponds roughly with the moon's quarter phases, which come every seven or eight days. The seven-day week is said to have originated in ancient times in W Asia, probably in Mesopotamia. This is thought to have been a planetary week predicated on the astrological concept of the influence of the planets, which were long erroneously believed to be seven celestial bodies revolving around the earth; these were the sun and moon and five of the bodies recognized today as planets—Mars, Mercury, Jupiter, Venus, and Saturn. The Hebrew week is based chiefly on the religious observance of the Sabbath, which comes every seventh day and is usually associated with the seventh day of creation, when the Lord rested from his labors. The Christian week and the Muslim week were probably derived chiefly from the Hebrew week, although the weekly holy days are different (Hebrew, Sabbath, seventh day; Christian, Sunday, first day; Muslim, Friday, sixth day). The influence of the weeks of Chaldaeans, Christians, and Jews slowly made itself felt in the Roman Empire, and elements of the systems were probably merged. The planetary week was at first preeminent, and the use of planetary names, based on names of pagan deities, continued even after Constantine (c.321) made the Christian week, beginning on Sunday, official in the civil calendar. The Roman names for the days of the week pervaded Western Europe; in most languages the forms are translations from Latin or attempts to assign corresponding names of divinities. The Latin names, their translations, the English equivalents, and their derivations follow: dies solis [sun's day], Sunday; dies lunae [moon's day], Monday [moonday]; dies Martis [Mars' day], Tuesday [Tiw's day]; dies Mercurii [Mercury's day], Wednesday [Woden's day]; dies Jovis [Jove's or Jupiter's day], Thursday [Thor's day]; dies Veneris [Venus' day], Friday [Frigg's day]; and dies Saturni [Saturn's day], Saturday.


 

To convert from week to:

day, multiply by 7.
hour, multiply by 168.
minute (time), multiply by 10080.
month, multiply by 0.2299795.
second, multiply by 6.048E+05.

Convert:  Into: 
Result: 

 
pronunciation

IN BRIEF: A period of seven days.

pronunciation Keep close to Nature's heart . . . and break clear away, once in awhile, and climb a mountain or spend a week in the woods. Wash your spirit clean. — John Muir (1838-1914), American naturalist.

 
Wikipedia: week

A week is a unit of time longer than a day and shorter than a month. In most modern calendars, including the Gregorian calendar, the week is a period of seven days.

The week as indicator of market day

Although seven day weeks are common to all modern societies now, anthropologists note that weeks of other durations (varying from three to eight days) are found in many pre-modern societies. They also observe that the name for "week" is often the same as that for "market day", suggesting the concept of a week is likely to arise in any agrarian or pre-agrarian society where people have marketplaces or market days. In sparsely populated areas where trade is not conducted every day it is essential that farmers and consumers agree in advance on what day they will meet, especially if the walk to market takes several hours or days. The week (meaning a fixed count of days) was much simpler and more precise way of doing this when compared with a lunar calendar-based system or a system based on the seasonal rotation of the celestial sphere. Being based on a count kept by people rather than on the relative motion of the moon and stars, the week was not "heavenly", but in the traditional seven-day week, this was overcome by assigning the sun, moon, and the five planets known to the ancients (Mercury, Venus, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn) each to a specific day of the week.

Origin of the seven-day week

Weekday heptagram used for the planets or the days of the week
Enlarge
Weekday heptagram used for the planets or the days of the week

The seven-day week became established in both the West and East according to different paths:

Hindu, Babylonian, and Jewish seven-day week

  • Hindu civilization employed a seven-day week, mentioned in the Ramayana, a sacred epic written in Sanskrit about 500 BCE, as Bhanu-vaar meaning Sunday, Soma-vaar meaning Moon-day and so forth.
  • The ancient Babylonians observed a seven-day week, stemming from astronomical observation and association. Days and deities were based on the seven heavenly bodies or "luminaries" visible to the naked eye (the Sun, Moon, and 5 visible planets).
  • The Hebrew (and later Christian, and Muslim) seven-day week corresponds to the biblical creation story, in which God created the universe in six days, then rested on the seventh.

Other theories speculate that the fixed seven-day period appeared due to evenly dividing a lunar month into quarters.

Chinese seven-day week

The Chinese use of the seven day week (and thus Korean, Japanese, Tibetan, and Vietnamese use) traces back to the 600s CE. The 28 stars were arranged in order of sun, moon, fire, water, wood, gold, earth, and every 7 days were called "qi-yao". The days were assigned to each of the luminaries, but the week did not affect social life or the official calendar. The law in the Han Dynasty required officials of the empire to rest every 5 days, called "mu", while it was changed into 10 days in the Tang Dynasty, called "huan" or xún (旬). With months being almost 3 weeks long (alternating 29 and 30 days) the weeks were labelled shàng xún (上旬), zhōng xún (中旬), and xià xún (下旬) which mean roughly "upper", "middle" and "lower" week. The 7 days "week" in ancient China is mostly kept in astrological purposes and cited in several Buddhist texts until the Jesuits reintroduced the concept in the 16th century. Thus the 19th century Japanese, when adopting the seven day western week, took their own astrological week with names for the days of the week that corresponded to the English names (and in fact were better preservations of the original Babylonian concepts, the English day names having been conflated with gods from Germanic mythology). By contrast, the Japanese names refer to the Chinese Sun, Moon and the five planets. The only difference is that the planets in the Japanese week have Chinese names based on the five elements rather than pagan deities.[1]

Later use of the week

Various groups of citizens of the Roman Empire adopted the week, especially those who had spent time in the eastern parts of the empire, such as Egypt, where the 7-day week was in use. Contemporaneously, Christians, following the biblical instruction, spread the week's use along with their religion.

As the early Christians evolved from being Jewish to being a distinct group, various groups evolved from celebrating both the Jewish Sabbath (Saturday) and the first day or the Lord's Day (Sunday), to celebrating only Sunday.

In 321 CE. the Roman Emperor Constantine regulated the use of the week due to a problem of the myriad uses of various days for religious observance, and established Sunday as the day for religious observance and rest for all groups, not just those Christians and others who were already observing Sunday.

The Jews of the 4th century retained their tradition of Saturday observance, by then 800 to 1700 years old, and continue to do so. Later, after the establishment of Islam, Friday became that religion's day of observance.

The seven-day week soon became a practice among Christians, Jews, and Muslims. Following European colonization and the subsequent rise of global corporate business, the seven-day week has become universal in keeping time, even in cultures that did not practise it before. Because of the two-day weekend, some modern calendars end the week on Sunday and begin it on Monday. The ISO week date, part of the international standard ISO 8601, also defines Monday as the first day of the week. In practice, this means that calendar formats disagree, and that "next week" said on Sunday means "the week beginning tomorrow".

In that international standard, the "first week of the year" is that week which includes the first Thursday of the year. This way, if a year starts in a long weekend Friday–Sunday, week 1 of the year will start after that. Since the New Year's Day itself is a holiday in many countries, this means that the first working day of the year is in week 1.

Weeks and the calendar year

Although without a direct astronomical basis (seven days is just under a quarter of a lunar month), it is widely used as a unit of time, especially in the social and commercial context. Weeks can be thought of as forming an independent continuous calendar running in parallel with various other calendars.

However, some novel calendars have been designed in which the weeks and years are forced into synchronization by adding a leap week or weekless days into the calendar. The advantage of these calendars is that a given date always falls on the same day of the week every year. For example the proposed World Calendar has 52 weeks and one or two extra days each year, while the 18th century French Revolutionary Calendar had 36 weeks of 10 days and five or six extra days. Alternatively, instead of adding extra days outside of weeks, it is possible to add entire weeks to the calendar if the years are allowed to vary in length by more than a day; for example, the former Icelandic calendar had years of 52 or 53 weeks. An early Norse calendar, from the beginning of the Viking Age, had five day weeks, called fimmts, arranged in 12 months of six fimmts each, with five ceremonial days not part of any month. The Hermetic Lunar Week Calendar uses the lunar week which is a quarter of a lunation and has 6, 7, 8 or 9 days (average 7.382647 days).

Days of the week

In English the days of the week are Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday and Sunday.

Monday is considered in many cultures to be the first day of the week and is literally named as such in languages such as Mandarin ('xinqiyi') and Lithuanian ('pirmadienis'). Even though the holiday day of rest of the week in Christian religion and tradition is Sunday, many business and social calendars in the Western Christian world mark Sunday as the first day of the week.

ISO prescribes Monday as the first day of the week with ISO-8601.

Saturday and Sunday are commonly called the weekend and are days of rest and recreation in most western cultures. The other five days are then known as weekdays, a term which before Saturday got a similar secular work exemption applied to all days except the Sunday; compare Feria. Friday and Saturday are days of rest in some Muslim countries and Israel. The Jewish Sabbath lasts from Friday sunset to Saturday nightfall.

In some countries such as Iran, the weekend is only one day long (Friday) and the week starts on a Saturday. Other Muslim countries have weekends on Thursday and Friday.

The two-day weekend has become prevalent only during the twentieth century[citation needed], leading to some calendars placing Sunday at the end of the week. The five-day working week, and some people mistaking Christian worship on Sunday for observance of the Sabbath day of rest has led most people in recent years to consider Monday to be the first day of the week[citation needed].

Facts and figures

  • 1 week = 7 days = 168 hours = 10,080 minutes = 604,800 seconds (except at daylight saving time transitions or leap seconds)
  • 1 Gregorian calendar year = 52 weeks + 1 day (2 days in a leap year)
  • 1 week = 23.01% of an average month

In a Gregorian mean year there are exactly 365.2425 days, and thus exactly 52.1775 weeks (unlike the Julian year of 365.25 days, which does not contain a number of weeks represented by a finite decimal expansion). There are exactly 20871 weeks in 400 Gregorian years, so 10 April 1605 was a Sunday just like 10 April 2005.

A system of Dominical letters has been used to determine the day of week in the Gregorian or the Julian calendar.

Week number

Weeks in a Gregorian calendar year can be numbered for each year. This style of numbering is commonly used (for example, by businesses) in some European and Asian countries, but rare elsewhere.

ISO 8601 includes the ISO week date system, a numbering system for weeks; each week is associated with the year in which Thursday occurs (so that if a year starts in a long weekend Friday–Sunday, week one of the year will start after that). Thus, for example, week 1 of 2004 (2004W01) ran from Monday 29 December 2003 to Sunday, 4 January 2004. The highest week number in a year may be 52 or 53.

The numbering system in different countries may deviate from the international ISO standard. There are at least six possibilities[2] [3]:

First day of week First week of year contains Weeks assigned twice Used by/in
Monday 1 January, 1st Sunday, 1–7 days of year yes UK
Monday 4 January, 1st Thursday, 4–7 days of year no Most of Europe ISO 8601(1988), European Norm EN 28601 (1992)
Monday 7 January, 1st Monday, 7 days of year no
Wednesday 1 January, 1st Tuesday, 1–7 days of year yes [citation needed]
Saturday 1 January, 1st Friday, 1–7 days of year yes
Sunday 1 January, 1st Saturday, 1–7 days of year yes USA [citation needed]

Liturgical week

In Christian liturgy, the week is mainly dominated by the special status of the Sunday.

The week was regarded as a sacred institution among the Jews owing to the law of the Sabbath rest and its association with the first chapter of Genesis. The earliest Christian converts seem tenacious of the usages (so far as they were compatible with the law of the Gospel) in which they had been brought up. The Sunday, "the first day of the week" (Acts 20:7; 1 Corinthians 16:2; cf. Revelation 1:10), soon replaced the Sabbath as the great day of religious observance, but the week itself remained as before. Indeed, there is much to recommend the idea that in the first and second centuries the only commemorations of the great Christian mysteries formed a weekly, not an annual, cycle. Sunday, according to the Epistle of Barnabas (xv), was "the beginning of another world", and the writer further says: "Wherefore also we keep the eighth day for rejoicing, in the which also Jesus rose from the dead and having been manifested ascended into the heavens". Again the Didache (viii) ordains: "Let not your fasts be with the hypocrites; for they fast on the second [Monday] and fifth [Thursday] days of the week, but do ye fast on the fourth [Wednesday] and on the day of preparation [Friday]", while in c. xiv we are told "And on the Day of the Lord come together and break bread and give thanks". Altogether it becomes clear from the language of Tertullian, the Apostolic Constitution and other early writers that the Sunday in each week was regarded as commemorating the Resurrection, and the Wednesday and Friday the betrayal and Passion of Christ.

Although this simple primitive conception gave place in time, as feasts were introduced and multiplied, to an annual calendar, the week always retained its importance; this is particularly seen in the Divine Office in the hebdomadal division of the Psalter for recitation. Amalarius preserves for us the particulars of the arrangement accepted in the chapel royal at Aachen in 802 CE by which the whole Psalter was recited in the course of each week. In its broader features the division was identical with that theoretically imposed by the Roman Breviary until the recent publication of the Apostolic Constitution "Divine afflatu" on 1 Nov., 1911 CE. Moreover, it appears from Amalarius that the Carlovingian arrangement was in substance the same as that already accepted by the Roman Church. Already in the sixth century, St. Benedict had clearly laid down the principle that the entire Psalter was to be recited at least once in the week; indeed a similar arrangement was attributed to Pope St. Damasus.

The consecration of particular days of the week to particular subjects of devotion is also officially recognized by the special Office of the Blessed Virgin on the Saturday, by the Friday Masses of the Passion during Lent and by the arrangement of Votive Offices for special week days approved by Pope Leo XIII. For a long time in the early Middle Ages, Thursday was regarded in the West as a sort of lesser feast or Sunday, probably because it was the day of the week on which the Ascension fell (cf. Bede, "Hist. Eccl.", IV, 25). Again the Breviary approved after the Council of Trent left certain devotion accretions to the Office, e.g. the Office for the Dead, Gradual Psalms, etc, to be said once a week, particularly on the Mondays of Advent and Lent.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Days of the Week in Chinese, Japanese and Vietnamese
  2. ^ http://www.pjh2.de/datetime/weeknumber/wnd.php?l=en#Legend
  3. ^ Calendar Weeks

References

External links

new:वाःnrm:Semanneksh:Wochru-sib:Семмицаcu:Седмица


 
Translations: Translations for: Week

Dansk (Danish)
n. - uge

idioms:

  • this day week    i dag om en uge
  • week in week out    uge efter uge

Nederlands (Dutch)
week, werkweek

Français (French)
n. - semaine

idioms:

  • a week ...    aujourdh'ui
  • a week on ...    lundi, mardi, etc en huit
  • week in, week out    toutes les semaines

Deutsch (German)
n. - Woche

idioms:

  • a week ...    eine Woche...
  • a week on ...    etwas wird sieben Tage später passieren nach dem erwarteten Datum
  • week in, week out    Woche für Woche

Ελληνική (Greek)
n. - εβδομάδα

idioms:

  • this day week    σήμερα οκτώ, σε μία ακριβώς εβδομάδα από σήμερα
  • week in week out    βδομάδα τη βδομάδα

Italiano (Italian)
settimana

idioms:

  • this day week    fra otto giorni
  • week in week out    continuamente

Português (Portuguese)
n. - semana (f)

idioms:

  • this day week    daqui a oito dias, há oito dias
  • week in week out    a cada duas semanas

Русский (Russian)
неделя, рабочая неделя

idioms:

  • this day week    ровно через неделю
  • week in week out    целыми неделями, беспрерывно

Español (Spanish)
n. - semana

idioms:

  • a week ...    una semana...
  • a week on ...    una semana a contar del...
  • week in, week out    semana tras semana, rutinario, siempre igual

Svenska (Swedish)
n. - vecka

中文(简体) (Chinese (Simplified))
星期, 周

idioms:

  • this day week    上星期的今天, 下星期的今天
  • week in week out    接连好几个星期, 一周又一周

中文(繁體) (Chinese (Traditional))
n. - 星期, 周

idioms:

  • this day week    上星期的今天, 下星期的今天
  • week in week out    接連好幾個星期, 一周又一周

한국어 (Korean)
n. - 주 (일요일부터 토요일까지), 7일

日本語 (Japanese)
n. - 週, 一週間, …週間, 就業日

idioms:

  • week in week out    毎週毎週

العربيه (Arabic)
‏(الاسم) أسبوع, جمعه‏

עברית (Hebrew)
n. - ‮שבוע, שבוע עבודה‬


 
Best of the Web: Weekly

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American Sign Language
commtechlab.msu.edu
 
 
 
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