A1
Days, Months, and Dates
Hari, Bulan, dan Tanggal
Days, Months, and Dates in Indonesian
Overview
Indonesian days and months are straightforward to learn, especially because many month names are similar to their English counterparts. Days of the week start with Monday (Senin) rather than Sunday, reflecting international conventions. The date format follows a day-month-year pattern, with the word tanggal (date) introducing the day number.
Unlike many Asian languages, Indonesian calendar vocabulary requires no special counters or classifiers. The words are simply used as-is, making scheduling and date-related conversations very accessible for beginners.
How It Works
Days of the Week
| Indonesian | English |
|---|---|
| Senin | Monday |
| Selasa | Tuesday |
| Rabu | Wednesday |
| Kamis | Thursday |
| Jumat | Friday |
| Sabtu | Saturday |
| Minggu | Sunday |
Months
| Indonesian | English |
|---|---|
| Januari | January |
| Februari | February |
| Maret | March |
| April | April |
| Mei | May |
| Juni | June |
| Juli | July |
| Agustus | August |
| September | September |
| Oktober | October |
| November | November |
| Desember | December |
Date Format
| Pattern | Example | English |
|---|---|---|
| tanggal + day + month + year | tanggal 17 Agustus 1945 | August 17, 1945 |
| hari + day name | hari Senin | Monday |
| bulan + month name | bulan Juni | June (the month of June) |
Useful Time Phrases
| Indonesian | English |
|---|---|
| minggu ini | this week |
| minggu depan | next week |
| minggu lalu | last week |
| bulan depan | next month |
| tahun ini | this year |
Examples in Context
| Indonesian | English | Note |
|---|---|---|
| Hari ini hari Selasa. | Today is Tuesday. | Stating the day |
| Bulan Juni sangat panas. | June is very hot. | Talking about months |
| Tanggal 17 Agustus. | August 17th. | Indonesia's independence day |
| Minggu depan saya pergi. | Next week I'll go. | Future planning |
| Dia lahir tanggal 5 Mei. | He was born on May 5th. | Birthday |
| Hari Jumat kami libur. | On Friday we have a day off. | Schedule |
| Bulan Desember dingin. | December is cold. | Weather and month |
| Tahun depan saya lulus. | Next year I graduate. | Future plans |
| Rabu atau Kamis? | Wednesday or Thursday? | Scheduling |
| Dua minggu lagi. | In two more weeks. | Future time |
Common Mistakes
Confusing Minggu (Sunday) and minggu (week)
- Wrong: Thinking Minggu depan means "next Sunday"
- Right: Minggu depan = "next week"; hari Minggu depan = "next Sunday"
- Why: Minggu means both "Sunday" and "week." Add hari before it to specify Sunday.
Using English date order (month-day)
- Wrong: Agustus 17 (English order)
- Right: tanggal 17 Agustus (day then month)
- Why: Indonesian follows day-month-year order, like most of the world outside the US.
Forgetting tanggal before the date number
- Wrong: 17 Agustus (in formal writing)
- Right: tanggal 17 Agustus
- Why: The word tanggal introduces the date number in standard Indonesian.
Practice Tips
- Practice saying today's date in Indonesian every morning: Hari ini hari [day], tanggal [number] [month]. This builds calendar vocabulary through daily repetition.
- Memorize the days of the week as a sequence — many Indonesians learn them as a chant: Senin, Selasa, Rabu, Kamis, Jumat, Sabtu, Minggu.
Related Concepts
- Numbers and Time — the number system used in dates
Prerequisite
Numbers and TimeA1More A1 concepts
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