Days, Months, Dates in English
Days and Months
Overview
Knowing the days of the week, months of the year, and how to say and write dates is fundamental at the A1 (Beginner) level. You need this vocabulary for making plans, talking about schedules, discussing birthdays, and understanding calendars.
One important rule in English is that days and months are always capitalized. Unlike many other languages, this is a strict rule in English writing, and forgetting it is a noticeable error.
English has two main date formats -- British and American -- which can cause confusion. Learning both will help you avoid misunderstandings, especially with numerical dates.
How It Works
Days of the week
| Day | Abbreviation |
|---|---|
| Monday | Mon |
| Tuesday | Tue / Tues |
| Wednesday | Wed |
| Thursday | Thu / Thurs |
| Friday | Fri |
| Saturday | Sat |
| Sunday | Sun |
The week starts on Monday in most English-speaking countries, but calendars in the United States often start on Sunday.
Months of the year
| Month | Abbreviation | Month | Abbreviation |
|---|---|---|---|
| January | Jan | July | Jul |
| February | Feb | August | Aug |
| March | Mar | September | Sep |
| April | Apr | October | Oct |
| May | May | November | Nov |
| June | Jun | December | Dec |
Date formats
| Style | Written | Spoken |
|---|---|---|
| British | 15th May 2024 / 15 May 2024 | the fifteenth of May, twenty twenty-four |
| American | May 15th, 2024 / May 15, 2024 | May fifteenth, twenty twenty-four |
Numerical dates can be ambiguous:
- 03/04/2024 = 3rd April (British) or March 4th (American)
This is a frequent source of confusion. When in doubt, write the month as a word.
Prepositions with days, months, and dates
| Preposition | Used with | Example |
|---|---|---|
| on | days and dates | on Friday, on July 4th |
| in | months, years, seasons | in March, in 2024, in summer |
| at | some holidays (BrE) | at Christmas, at Easter |
Saying years
| Year | How to say it |
|---|---|
| 1999 | nineteen ninety-nine |
| 2000 | two thousand / the year two thousand |
| 2005 | two thousand and five (BrE) / twenty oh five |
| 2024 | twenty twenty-four / two thousand and twenty-four |
Examples in Context
| English | Note |
|---|---|
| Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday... | Always capitalized |
| January, February, March... | Always capitalized |
| On Friday | Preposition "on" with days |
| In September | Preposition "in" with months |
| My birthday is on July 4th. | Date with preposition |
| I was born in 1995. | Year with preposition |
| See you on Saturday! | Making plans |
| The meeting is on the 15th. | Date without month (context known) |
| School starts in September. | Month |
| What day is it today? It's Wednesday. | Asking about the day |
| We're closed on Sundays. | Regular schedule (plural day) |
| They got married in June. | Month |
Common Mistakes
Not capitalizing days and months
- Wrong: I'll see you on tuesday in january.
- Right: I'll see you on Tuesday in January.
- Why: Days and months are always capitalized in English. This is a firm rule, not a style choice.
Using wrong prepositions
- Wrong: I'll see you at Monday. She was born at March.
- Right: I'll see you on Monday. She was born in March.
- Why: Days and dates use "on." Months and years use "in." Specific times use "at."
Confusing British and American date formats
- Wrong: Interpreting 01/02/2024 without knowing the format
- Right: Write the month as a word when there could be confusion: "1 February 2024" or "February 1, 2024"
- Why: 01/02 is January 2nd in American format but 1st February in British format. Always clarify.
Misspelling common months and days
- Wrong: Wendsday, Febuary, Wensday
- Right: Wednesday, February
- Why: "Wednesday" has a silent "d" (Wed-nes-day) and "February" has two "r"s (Feb-ru-ary). These are among the most commonly misspelled English words.
Usage Notes
When talking about recurring events, days can be made plural: "I work on Saturdays" (every Saturday). This is the same in British and American English.
The main British/American differences with dates:
- British: day before month (15 May)
- American: month before day (May 15)
- British: "on the weekend" is less common; "at the weekend" is used instead
- American: "on the weekend" is standard
In conversation, people often skip the year when it is obvious from context: "My birthday is on March 3rd" (not specifying the year).
Practice Tips
- Daily practice: Each morning, say today's full date out loud: "Today is Wednesday, the first of April, twenty twenty-six" (British) or "Today is Wednesday, April first, twenty twenty-six" (American).
- Birthday list: Write down the birthdays of family members and friends using full date expressions. Practice saying them with the correct preposition.
- Spelling drill: Write out Wednesday and February several times. These two words are consistently among the hardest to spell for both learners and native speakers.
Related Concepts
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