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Conference thebay::joyoflex

Title:The Joy of Lex
Notice:A Notes File even your grammar could love
Moderator:THEBAY::SYSTEM
Created:Fri Feb 28 1986
Last Modified:Mon Jun 02 1997
Last Successful Update:Fri Jun 06 1997
Number of topics:1192
Total number of notes:42769

271.0. "Monday _week_" by BAEDEV::RECKARD () Mon Nov 10 1986 12:03

	What is the proper use and/or meaning of "Monday week"?

	I'm not sure of the correct phrasing, but I'll try this as an example:
"I have a dentist appointment Monday week.".  If today is Tuesday, Nov. 11,
what date is being referred to:  Nov. 10, or Nov. 17?   What if today were
Sunday, Nov. 9?
	(I started thinking about this after wondering how to differentiate
between "next Monday" and "this Monday".)
    
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271.1BEING::POSTPISCHILAlways mount a scratch monkey.Mon Nov 10 1986 12:3615
    Re .0:
    
    > "I have a dentist appointment Monday week."
    
    I cannot recall ever hearing or seeing that usage.
    
    As far as determining when the actual date is, the tense tells you
    whether it is the tenth or the seventeenth.  I recall a system service
    on Unix to parse dates, so that you could, for example, go into the
    news program and ask for the new articles since Tuesday, yesterday, or
    last Sunday.  I do not have access to Unix any longer.  Perhaps
    somebody with access now can tell us more about this.
    
    
    				-- edp 
271.2A Canado-American repliesPSTJTT::TABERRemember what the doormouse saidMon Nov 10 1986 12:557
"Monday week" is a usage from Brittan, still used in Canada.  It means a 
week from next Monday, i.e. one week after Monday next occurs.  I don't 
think I've heard it much in the US.  The only exception in our family 
was when it was said on a Monday, then it would mean "a week from 
today," since monday was occuring this very moment.

					>>>==>PStJTT
271.3Where it's found in U.S.DRAGON::MCVAYPete McVay, VRO (Telecomm)Mon Nov 10 1986 13:324
    "Monday week" is also current--and very much used--in the Tidewater
    Virginia area.  This is the same place that also uses "howse" for
    "house".  Many of the colloquialisms are holdovers from colonial
    days.  The meaning is the same as given in the previous reply.
271.4It's in my dictionary -- checked yours?SUPER::MATTHEWSDon't panicMon Nov 10 1986 16:308
    This usage of "week" appears in the American Heritage Dictionary,
    with no indication that it is regional. 
    
    To compound the confusion, "week" can be used to mean one week ago
    from a specified day; their example is "It was Friday week that
    we last met."
    
    					Val
271.5KBOV07::TINIUSKaufbeuren, GermanyWed Nov 12 1986 07:503
In German the expression is "Montag in acht Tagen", Monday in *eight* days.

Stephen
271.6It's Monday & I'm weakAMUSED::UPPERI canna ge' enuf power-r, sur-r-r!Mon Nov 24 1986 13:5011
The only way I've ever heard it -- out in the puckerbrush -- was to mean
'Two Mondays ago' or 'A week before the previous Monday', meaning, I
suppose that the previous Monday marked a week since the event in question.

EG:  'The bahn fell daown Monday week.' (Today is some day after Monday,
and the barn collapse occurred on the Monday of the previous week.)

Whew!

BU

271.7Britain!!!IOSG::DEMORGANTue May 19 1987 06:545
    It is indeed used in Britain (not Brittan!). However its meaning
    (as well as terms such as "a week on monday") varies in different
    parts of the country. I don't advise its use.
    
    Richard De Morgan.