week from monday
Học thuậtThân thiện
Definition
Noun Phrase: A point in time that is seven days after the upcoming Monday. It refers to the Monday of the following week.
Usage
This phrase is used to specify a date precisely one week (seven days) after the next occurrence of Monday. It is a common way to schedule future appointments or events.
Examples
- "Let's schedule our next meeting for a week from Monday."
- "The project deadline is a week from Monday, so we have plenty of time."
- "She will return from her trip a week from Monday."
Advanced Usage
- The phrase can be modified with other time indicators. For example, "the week from Monday" can sometimes be used to refer to the entire seven-day period starting on the upcoming Monday, though "a week from Monday" for a specific point in time is more common.
- It is often used in contrast to "this Monday" (the very next Monday) and "next Monday" (which can be ambiguous, sometimes meaning the Monday of the following week).
Variants and Related Words
- Monday week: (Chiefly British) A synonymous phrase meaning the Monday after the next one. (e.g., "I'll see you Monday week.")
- A week on Monday: Another common synonymous phrase. (e.g., "The event is a week on Monday.")
Synonyms
- The Monday after next
- In eight days' time (counting from a day before Sunday)
- Next Monday (context-dependent; can be ambiguous)
Notes
- The phrase is calendar-specific. If today is Tuesday, "a week from Monday" refers to the Monday that is six days away, not thirteen.
- It is a fixed temporal expression and functions as a single adverbial noun phrase.
Noun
- a time period of a week or more
- a week from Monday will be too soon!