First Day of the Week
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First Day of the Week
There seems to be a disagreement as to whether Sunday or Monday is the first day of the week. I was always told it was Sunday, this is supported by calenders and school text books. But many people think that Monday is the first day of the week. This also makes sense, with Sunday being the 7th day (the rest day according to the book of Genesis) and how work begins on Mondays.
Does anybody know what the history of this disagreement is? Which do you think is the right one?
Does anybody know what the history of this disagreement is? Which do you think is the right one?
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This is your answer.Bertros Bertros wrote:One of the several ISO definitions used to define the first week of a given year in terms of week numbering is
So by the definition of the ISO Monday is the first day of the week.wikipedia wrote:the week starting with the Monday in the period 29 December - 4 January
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what does ISO stand for? (just checking for uhh authenticityBertros Bertros wrote:One of the several ISO definitions used to define the first week of a given year in terms of week numbering is
So by the definition of the ISO Monday is the first day of the week.wikipedia wrote:the week starting with the Monday in the period 29 December - 4 January
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Re: First Day of the Week
Actually, Biblically, the 7th day of the week was Sabbath / Saturday, which is why Jews still worship on Saturday. Early Christians began worshiping on the "1st day of the week" which was Sunday, based on the fact that that is when Christ rose again. Of course, the reason that that was considered the 1st day of the week was because that's when the work began, so it seems that this particular question must be settled by another authority than Scripture.chewyman wrote: I was always told it was Sunday, this is supported by calenders and school text books. But many people think that Monday is the first day of the week. This also makes sense, with Sunday being the 7th day (the rest day according to the book of Genesis) and how work begins on Mondays.
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The International Organization for Standardization.static_ice wrote:what does ISO stand for? (just checking for uhh authenticityBertros Bertros wrote:One of the several ISO definitions used to define the first week of a given year in terms of week numbering is
So by the definition of the ISO Monday is the first day of the week.wikipedia wrote:the week starting with the Monday in the period 29 December - 4 January)
I think they also do S.I. units like amperes, volts, coulombs and so on.
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Do the ISO simply make suggestions or is what they say actually enforced? For example, according to them is the metric system used?
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Sunday for me because whether it's summer or winter I still have to wake up early for church
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Hmm, the vote is pretty much even. I wonder if this debate will become as contentious as whether the toilet roll should be up or down or what the correct pronunciation of 'castle' is...
If I had a world of my own, everything would be nonsense. Nothing would be what it is, because everything would be what it isn't. And contrary wise, what is, it wouldn't be. And what it wouldn't be, it would. You see?
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Simply put they make suggestions for standardisation between countires. They have no jurisdiction to enforce any standards as they are non-governmental, but in practice the vast majority of the standards they set are enforced by national standards bodies.chewyman wrote:Do the ISO simply make suggestions or is what they say actually enforced? For example, according to them is the metric system used?




