OK - being from Denmark where the convention is that weeks start on monday, I’ve always been puzzled by the fact that weeks in the US start on sunday. Does anyone know why?
I’d think that the logical thing would be to start them on monday in christian countries. God didn’t start his week with a day of rest, he ended it with one. And so, monday should be the first day of the week and sunday the last day.
Is it because it is based on the jewish convention that the day of rest is saturday?
well… not being christian or jewish I can’t comment on that, but, I’d guess that us American’s are either really dumb and were confused, OR, because we are simply lazy and want to take the day off in the beginning rather than waiting…
or we wanted to split the week evenly rather than having it off balence
don’t think too much about it. They are americans.
they measure in inch, weight in pounds, and get a cold when it’s 40°.
Time has the format month-day-year, and the week starts at its last day.
The only lifetime task of americans is to confuse europeans.
here in obfuscatia, we start our day with a coffee break just like we start our week with a day off, just in case we don’t get a rest for another 6 days … now that’s forward thinking :thumb:
…and the more euro’s we can rattle with it - the better
My weeks start on Tuesday. I live in the US. Its actually very region specific. When I lived further north (in the same state) my day started on mondays, but now down here everything starts on Tuesdays. Just because the calendars have Sunday as the first day of the week, doesn’t mean that everyone follows that same tradition.
People should stop generalizing the US population so that they come across as all christians. The week probably starts on Sunday because the majority (not all) of the people who started printing calendars and such decided to make it sunday.
Saturday and Sunday are both considered “week-end” days, so if you imagine a strip of tape or something, and loop them so that the two ends are sticking to eachother, then imagine that in a calendar setting, I think you’ll see what I’m saying.