释义 |
View usage for: (wiːkdeɪ) Word forms: plural weekdayscountable nounA weekday is any of the days of the week except Saturday and Sunday. If you want to avoid the crowds, it's best to come on a weekday. Visitor Centre and shop open 9 a.m.–5 p.m. weekdays; 10 a.m.–5 p.m. weekends. weekday in British English (ˈwiːkˌdeɪ) nounany day of the week other than Sunday and, often, Saturday weekday in American English (wikˌdeɪ) noun1. any day of the week except Sunday (or, as in Judaism, Saturday) 2. any day not in the weekend adjective3. of, for, or on a weekday Examples of 'weekday' in a sentenceweekday In some areas up to three quarters of surgeries shut on weekday afternoons.This might win us a further 45 minutes of dozing, but after that he really is up and we lock into our weekday morning routine.Sources said that his weekday show may now be taken off air unless the investigation is dropped.Women are targeted more than men by criminals who most commonly strike on weekday afternoons.My first attempts began on a wet weekday morning.Experts recommend the difference between getting up on weekdays and weekends should be no more than two hours.This will mean you only buy what you actually need and will also save you time on busy weekday mornings.These cards can be used after 10am on weekdays and throughout weekends and public holidays.Prisoners were unlocked at 6.30 each weekday morning.One thing is for sure - his choice over the next ten weekday afternoons will not be dull.I arrived on a weekday afternoon and the galleries were almost empty.It was a weekday afternoon.In four of its main car parks the first two hours are free on weekdays, and weekends are free all day.Now, on weekday mornings, it can be told.For me, for the foreseeable, there are no weekends or weekdays.It is a weekday afternoon, but the pub near the Oval cricket ground is packed.It gets crowded at weekends, but on weekday mornings, you can bathe in splendid isolation.Indeed, the only shop buzzing on a recent weekday morning was Oxfam.If they wanted to highlight their cause, why aren't the strikes proposed for weekends and not weekdays?The average person slips back under the covers for 19 minutes on weekday mornings and 90 minutes at weekends.The studio is open on weekdays, too, when anyone with a can can have a go for free.Now it seems to be a numbers game - they collect mistresses like new cars, and polish them on weekday afternoons.Deaths from these causes are also more often reported during weekdays than on weekends, when in general, more injury deaths occur.It is, after all, the camaraderie of colleagues you miss most as you broach the uncharted loneliness of a weekday afternoon.A month ago, with no warning or explanation, the weekday shows simply disappeared from the schedules. In other languagesweekday British English: weekday / ˈwiːkˌdeɪ/ NOUN A weekday is any day of the week except Saturday and Sunday. - American English: weekday
- Arabic: يَوْمٌ في الُأسْبُوع
- Brazilian Portuguese: dia da semana
- Chinese: 周日
- Croatian: dan u tjednu
- Czech: všední den
- Danish: ugedag
- Dutch: weekdag
- European Spanish: día laborable
- Finnish: arkipäivä
- French: jour de semaine
- German: Wochentag
- Greek: εργάσιμη ημέρα
- Italian: giorno feriale
- Japanese: 平日
- Korean: 평일
- Norwegian: ukedag
- Polish: dzień powszedni
- European Portuguese: dia da semana
- Romanian: zi lucrătoare
- Russian: рабочий день
- Latin American Spanish: día laborable
- Swedish: veckodag
- Thai: วันธรรมดาตั้งแต่วันจันทร์ถึงวันศุกร์
- Turkish: hafta içi
- Ukrainian: будень
- Vietnamese: ngày trong tuần
Chinese translation of 'weekday' n (c) -
工作日 (gōngzuòrì) (个(個), gè) on weekdays 在工作日 (zài gōngzuòrì)
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