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- Newsgroups: sci.skeptic
- Path: sparky!uunet!spool.mu.edu!uwm.edu!cs.utexas.edu!asuvax!ncar!noao!stsci!stosc!hathaway
- From: hathaway@stsci.edu
- Subject: Re: Days of the Week, revisited
- Message-ID: <1993Jan28.171354.1@stsci.edu>
- Lines: 73
- Sender: news@stsci.edu
- Organization: Space Telescope Science Institute
- References: <1993Jan27.163007.1@stsci.edu> <GERRY.93Jan28102659@onion.cmu.edu> <1993Jan28.145955.1@stsci.edu> <28697@dog.ee.lbl.gov>
- Distribution: na
- Date: Thu, 28 Jan 1993 22:13:54 GMT
-
- In article <28697@dog.ee.lbl.gov>, veklerov@spindle.ee.lbl.gov (eugene veklerov) writes:
- > In article <1993Jan28.145955.1@stsci.edu> hathaway@stsci.edu writes:
- >>In article <GERRY.93Jan28102659@onion.cmu.edu>, gerry@cmu.edu (Gerry Roston) writes:
- >>> In article <1993Jan27.163007.1@stsci.edu> hathaway@stsci.edu writes:
- >>>
- >>> nth day Planet English Babylon Teuton French
- >>>
- >>> 1st day Sun Sunday Shamash Sunnundag Dimanche (Lord's Day)
- >>> 2nd day Moon Monday Sin Monandag Lundi
- >>> 3rd day Mars Tuesday Nergal Tiesdag Mardi
- >
- > [the rest is removed to save the bandwidth]
- >
- > The problem is that in many European countries, the 1st day of the week is
- > Monday, rather than Sunday. Perhaps, the Americans prefer to rest before
- > starting a new week but others feel better taking a break after the work
- > is done.
- >
- > That is reflected in languages. Here is the Russian version:
- >
- > 2nd day Vtornik (vtoroy == second)
- > 4th day Chetverg (chetverty == fourth)
- > 5th day P'atnitsa (p'at' == fifth)
- >
- > Eugene Veklerov
-
- Yes - actually this book lists the days for 32 languages, and for
- Russian, Bulgarian, Polish, Czech, Hungarian, and Chinese, the numbering
- is one day different from the other languages that use numbers rather than
- days. Indeed, even in American calendars, the first day is displayed
- as Sunday, but most of us workers consider the first (work) day on
- Monday as the start of the week. The book discusses these dual usages
- in the context of Sabbath (on 'Saturday') vs. Sunday (also developed
- as a religious day). As there is no real astronomical zero-point, what is
- considered the 'first' seems to be a matter of custom and preference.
- I know when pay day is though. :-)
-
-
- If you want to see a real weird week, consider the shift work
- schedule I followed for four+ years with a geosynchronous telescope -
-
- 7 days on - first shift (Thurs - Wed)
- 4 days off (Thurs - Sun)
- 7 days on - second shift (Mon - Sun)
- 3 days off (Mon - Wed)
- 2 days on - office work (Thurs - Fri)
- 2 days off (Sat - Sun)
- 2 days on - office work (Mon - Tue)
- 1 day off (Wed)
- ------
- 28 days - 18 on, 10 off (Work half the Sat/Sun weekends, other half off)
-
- Then start over again, BUT the first shift then started 2 hours earlier than
- the month before (with the second shift following - there was no third
- shift - the European control center operated it then).
- (2 hours / month * 12 months / year) = 24 hours / year equals the difference
- between the normal year and the sidereal year (one extra turn around the sky).
- [Yes, 28 days is not quite a month, but then with these killer shifts, we had
- such turn-over we'd have to start a new schedule often enough to adjust - we
- just wouldn't get days off, but for a long time I could tell when my shift
- was about to start back up by looking at the phase of the moon.]
-
- Oil rig workers, firefighters, police, military, medical folk, other space
- people all have various 'weeks'.
-
- Here at STScI schedule observations on an unambiguous day-of-year and UT.
- But each week starts at Zero UT Sunday/Monday. (i.e. next week starts
- at 1993.032:00:00:00).
-
- Regards,
-
- Wm. Hathaway
-
-