Is there a word used to describe a weekend plus a one-day holiday?












41















I'd like to ask my friend out this coming weekend plus the coming Martin Luther King holiday.



I was about to say: How's your weekend shaping up? But I feel like he might also be available on the Monday holiday. Is there a better word than just weekend (basically just Saturday and Sunday) here?



In my native language, there is a word literally means "small holiday" (a weekend plus a one day holiday usually connected to the weekend); is there something like this in English?










share|improve this question

























  • @HotLicks Or preceded by one.

    – CodeGnome
    Jan 19 at 21:01











  • @CodeGnome - Except that that rarely happens in the US.

    – Hot Licks
    Jan 19 at 21:41






  • 2





    @KennethK. - That's not a 3-day weekend.

    – Hot Licks
    Jan 19 at 23:18






  • 5





    Hi Nicholas, if you're comfortable revealing, could you please tell us what your native language is, and what the phrase for "small holiday" is. I really think it adds to questions like this where one asks for analogies in English for structures / words / phrases in other languages.

    – WetSavannaAnimal aka Rod Vance
    Jan 20 at 22:36






  • 1





    @Fattie: ... um. No, no they're not. (What makes this question trivial? What does it have to do with learning English? If it really were trivial, why would that make it suitable for ELL? I could go on...)

    – Marthaª
    15 hours ago
















41















I'd like to ask my friend out this coming weekend plus the coming Martin Luther King holiday.



I was about to say: How's your weekend shaping up? But I feel like he might also be available on the Monday holiday. Is there a better word than just weekend (basically just Saturday and Sunday) here?



In my native language, there is a word literally means "small holiday" (a weekend plus a one day holiday usually connected to the weekend); is there something like this in English?










share|improve this question

























  • @HotLicks Or preceded by one.

    – CodeGnome
    Jan 19 at 21:01











  • @CodeGnome - Except that that rarely happens in the US.

    – Hot Licks
    Jan 19 at 21:41






  • 2





    @KennethK. - That's not a 3-day weekend.

    – Hot Licks
    Jan 19 at 23:18






  • 5





    Hi Nicholas, if you're comfortable revealing, could you please tell us what your native language is, and what the phrase for "small holiday" is. I really think it adds to questions like this where one asks for analogies in English for structures / words / phrases in other languages.

    – WetSavannaAnimal aka Rod Vance
    Jan 20 at 22:36






  • 1





    @Fattie: ... um. No, no they're not. (What makes this question trivial? What does it have to do with learning English? If it really were trivial, why would that make it suitable for ELL? I could go on...)

    – Marthaª
    15 hours ago














41












41








41


2






I'd like to ask my friend out this coming weekend plus the coming Martin Luther King holiday.



I was about to say: How's your weekend shaping up? But I feel like he might also be available on the Monday holiday. Is there a better word than just weekend (basically just Saturday and Sunday) here?



In my native language, there is a word literally means "small holiday" (a weekend plus a one day holiday usually connected to the weekend); is there something like this in English?










share|improve this question
















I'd like to ask my friend out this coming weekend plus the coming Martin Luther King holiday.



I was about to say: How's your weekend shaping up? But I feel like he might also be available on the Monday holiday. Is there a better word than just weekend (basically just Saturday and Sunday) here?



In my native language, there is a word literally means "small holiday" (a weekend plus a one day holiday usually connected to the weekend); is there something like this in English?







single-word-requests






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Jan 21 at 12:01









psmears

13.1k14658




13.1k14658










asked Jan 19 at 16:46









NicholasNicholas

363137




363137













  • @HotLicks Or preceded by one.

    – CodeGnome
    Jan 19 at 21:01











  • @CodeGnome - Except that that rarely happens in the US.

    – Hot Licks
    Jan 19 at 21:41






  • 2





    @KennethK. - That's not a 3-day weekend.

    – Hot Licks
    Jan 19 at 23:18






  • 5





    Hi Nicholas, if you're comfortable revealing, could you please tell us what your native language is, and what the phrase for "small holiday" is. I really think it adds to questions like this where one asks for analogies in English for structures / words / phrases in other languages.

    – WetSavannaAnimal aka Rod Vance
    Jan 20 at 22:36






  • 1





    @Fattie: ... um. No, no they're not. (What makes this question trivial? What does it have to do with learning English? If it really were trivial, why would that make it suitable for ELL? I could go on...)

    – Marthaª
    15 hours ago



















  • @HotLicks Or preceded by one.

    – CodeGnome
    Jan 19 at 21:01











  • @CodeGnome - Except that that rarely happens in the US.

    – Hot Licks
    Jan 19 at 21:41






  • 2





    @KennethK. - That's not a 3-day weekend.

    – Hot Licks
    Jan 19 at 23:18






  • 5





    Hi Nicholas, if you're comfortable revealing, could you please tell us what your native language is, and what the phrase for "small holiday" is. I really think it adds to questions like this where one asks for analogies in English for structures / words / phrases in other languages.

    – WetSavannaAnimal aka Rod Vance
    Jan 20 at 22:36






  • 1





    @Fattie: ... um. No, no they're not. (What makes this question trivial? What does it have to do with learning English? If it really were trivial, why would that make it suitable for ELL? I could go on...)

    – Marthaª
    15 hours ago

















@HotLicks Or preceded by one.

– CodeGnome
Jan 19 at 21:01





@HotLicks Or preceded by one.

– CodeGnome
Jan 19 at 21:01













@CodeGnome - Except that that rarely happens in the US.

– Hot Licks
Jan 19 at 21:41





@CodeGnome - Except that that rarely happens in the US.

– Hot Licks
Jan 19 at 21:41




2




2





@KennethK. - That's not a 3-day weekend.

– Hot Licks
Jan 19 at 23:18





@KennethK. - That's not a 3-day weekend.

– Hot Licks
Jan 19 at 23:18




5




5





Hi Nicholas, if you're comfortable revealing, could you please tell us what your native language is, and what the phrase for "small holiday" is. I really think it adds to questions like this where one asks for analogies in English for structures / words / phrases in other languages.

– WetSavannaAnimal aka Rod Vance
Jan 20 at 22:36





Hi Nicholas, if you're comfortable revealing, could you please tell us what your native language is, and what the phrase for "small holiday" is. I really think it adds to questions like this where one asks for analogies in English for structures / words / phrases in other languages.

– WetSavannaAnimal aka Rod Vance
Jan 20 at 22:36




1




1





@Fattie: ... um. No, no they're not. (What makes this question trivial? What does it have to do with learning English? If it really were trivial, why would that make it suitable for ELL? I could go on...)

– Marthaª
15 hours ago





@Fattie: ... um. No, no they're not. (What makes this question trivial? What does it have to do with learning English? If it really were trivial, why would that make it suitable for ELL? I could go on...)

– Marthaª
15 hours ago










4 Answers
4






active

oldest

votes


















215














In English, this is commonly called a 'long weekend'. Depending on the length, 'three-day weekend' or 'four-day weekend' works as well.






share|improve this answer





















  • 9





    @stib Eastern US here, definitely the only thing I would consider calling this is a long weekend.

    – Stephen S
    Jan 20 at 0:23






  • 23





    @StephenS - Also eastern US (Virginia), I'd say "three-day weekend."

    – SomethingDark
    Jan 20 at 1:49






  • 5





    SW UK, and this is definitely a long weekend around here.

    – Richard Ward
    Jan 20 at 16:12








  • 14





    Southern US, and I've heard "long weekend" but it feels less natural than "three-day weekend".

    – Hearth
    Jan 20 at 19:13






  • 4





    Canada: long weekend.

    – ermanen
    Jan 20 at 20:52



















37














In British English, a public holiday is called a "bank holiday", and when it occurs on a Monday, as it often does, the three-day period is called a "bank holiday weekend".






share|improve this answer



















  • 9





    But do note that this is specific to weekends "extended" by a bank holiday. If you have a SAT-SUN-MON off because you've taken some leave from work, that is not a "bank holiday weekend". That's just an extra day off, or as Glorfindel said, a "long weekend".

    – Richard Ward
    Jan 20 at 16:14






  • 1





    @RichardWard note that "Martin Luther King holiday" would be a reasonable comparison to a bank holiday I think

    – UKMonkey
    Jan 20 at 21:00






  • 1





    'Bank Holiday' is not all UK (or did not used to be); just England and Wales, not Scotland, and do not know about NI.

    – Keith
    Jan 20 at 22:31






  • 2





    @Keith There are separate bank holidays for E&W, Scotland, and Northern Ireland, and it's been that way since at least 1971. Although keep in mind that an employer isn't obligated to give you the day off for a bank holiday.

    – LMS
    Jan 21 at 14:42











  • “In British English” or “In Britain”? British English is spoken in more places than Britain, and those places don't all call their public holidays “bank holidays”.

    – SevenSidedDie
    Jan 21 at 20:18





















30














One more possibility is the phrase holiday weekend. From Merriam-Webster:




a weekend that is preceded or followed by a holiday




This is my go-to phrase in situations like you describe, since it doesn't assume that the other person actually gets the holiday off from work (I don't get MLK Day off, for example; rather, my employer offers events at work celebrating MLK, Jr.'s legacy).



So you could say something like:




How's your holiday weekend shaping up? Do you have Monday off?




It also works for slightly longer holidays, such as (the US) Thanksgiving, or the 4th of July when it falls on a Tuesday or Thursday.






share|improve this answer


























  • This answer seems the most correct for the OP. The selected answer, while also correct, can apply to general situations where a person takes a sick day on Friday or Monday - i.e. not being an actual holiday. (This is based on my Midwestern US variety of English)

    – whatisit
    yesterday













  • Note that this is not appropriate in British English, where "holiday" has a different meaning (= US "vacation", i.e. time off work or away from home). If it weren't for our constant exposure to American media, it would be very confusing to a Brit to hear that someone was working on a "holiday weekend".

    – IMSoP
    yesterday





















18














I think we need to coin the phrase, Threekend






share|improve this answer








New contributor




Capricorn1 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
















  • 10





    You could make a case for threekend, as it isn't entirely original. It'd be great if you edited your answer to back it up! As it stands, it might get deleted; it was flagged by the review system as "low quality because of its length and content".

    – tmgr
    Jan 20 at 0:08






  • 7





    I honestly just thought of it at the moment. I didn't think to look at up at the time, but I'm also not surprised I'm not the first. And somebody once wrote, "Brevity is the soul of wit." Apparently not here though. Tough crowd.

    – Capricorn1
    Jan 20 at 13:50






  • 9





    No insult intended in saying threekend isn't original: point is, it's a better answer if you weren't the first to get there. It'll definitely attract more upvotes if you make the case, provide references and back up your answer. That's the standard here: authoritative, referenced answers that explain why they are right, rather than unsourced opinion... or pithy one-liners, no harm to you or your bard! Have a poke round the Help Centre.... and please do stick around.

    – tmgr
    Jan 20 at 14:03






  • 7





    Why do you think we need to coin a phrase??

    – curiousdannii
    Jan 21 at 6:26











  • Heh, I may actually start using this.

    – Lightness Races in Orbit
    yesterday



















4 Answers
4






active

oldest

votes








4 Answers
4






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









215














In English, this is commonly called a 'long weekend'. Depending on the length, 'three-day weekend' or 'four-day weekend' works as well.






share|improve this answer





















  • 9





    @stib Eastern US here, definitely the only thing I would consider calling this is a long weekend.

    – Stephen S
    Jan 20 at 0:23






  • 23





    @StephenS - Also eastern US (Virginia), I'd say "three-day weekend."

    – SomethingDark
    Jan 20 at 1:49






  • 5





    SW UK, and this is definitely a long weekend around here.

    – Richard Ward
    Jan 20 at 16:12








  • 14





    Southern US, and I've heard "long weekend" but it feels less natural than "three-day weekend".

    – Hearth
    Jan 20 at 19:13






  • 4





    Canada: long weekend.

    – ermanen
    Jan 20 at 20:52
















215














In English, this is commonly called a 'long weekend'. Depending on the length, 'three-day weekend' or 'four-day weekend' works as well.






share|improve this answer





















  • 9





    @stib Eastern US here, definitely the only thing I would consider calling this is a long weekend.

    – Stephen S
    Jan 20 at 0:23






  • 23





    @StephenS - Also eastern US (Virginia), I'd say "three-day weekend."

    – SomethingDark
    Jan 20 at 1:49






  • 5





    SW UK, and this is definitely a long weekend around here.

    – Richard Ward
    Jan 20 at 16:12








  • 14





    Southern US, and I've heard "long weekend" but it feels less natural than "three-day weekend".

    – Hearth
    Jan 20 at 19:13






  • 4





    Canada: long weekend.

    – ermanen
    Jan 20 at 20:52














215












215








215







In English, this is commonly called a 'long weekend'. Depending on the length, 'three-day weekend' or 'four-day weekend' works as well.






share|improve this answer















In English, this is commonly called a 'long weekend'. Depending on the length, 'three-day weekend' or 'four-day weekend' works as well.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Jan 22 at 10:26









CJ Dennis

1,92141643




1,92141643










answered Jan 19 at 16:50









GlorfindelGlorfindel

8,030103741




8,030103741








  • 9





    @stib Eastern US here, definitely the only thing I would consider calling this is a long weekend.

    – Stephen S
    Jan 20 at 0:23






  • 23





    @StephenS - Also eastern US (Virginia), I'd say "three-day weekend."

    – SomethingDark
    Jan 20 at 1:49






  • 5





    SW UK, and this is definitely a long weekend around here.

    – Richard Ward
    Jan 20 at 16:12








  • 14





    Southern US, and I've heard "long weekend" but it feels less natural than "three-day weekend".

    – Hearth
    Jan 20 at 19:13






  • 4





    Canada: long weekend.

    – ermanen
    Jan 20 at 20:52














  • 9





    @stib Eastern US here, definitely the only thing I would consider calling this is a long weekend.

    – Stephen S
    Jan 20 at 0:23






  • 23





    @StephenS - Also eastern US (Virginia), I'd say "three-day weekend."

    – SomethingDark
    Jan 20 at 1:49






  • 5





    SW UK, and this is definitely a long weekend around here.

    – Richard Ward
    Jan 20 at 16:12








  • 14





    Southern US, and I've heard "long weekend" but it feels less natural than "three-day weekend".

    – Hearth
    Jan 20 at 19:13






  • 4





    Canada: long weekend.

    – ermanen
    Jan 20 at 20:52








9




9





@stib Eastern US here, definitely the only thing I would consider calling this is a long weekend.

– Stephen S
Jan 20 at 0:23





@stib Eastern US here, definitely the only thing I would consider calling this is a long weekend.

– Stephen S
Jan 20 at 0:23




23




23





@StephenS - Also eastern US (Virginia), I'd say "three-day weekend."

– SomethingDark
Jan 20 at 1:49





@StephenS - Also eastern US (Virginia), I'd say "three-day weekend."

– SomethingDark
Jan 20 at 1:49




5




5





SW UK, and this is definitely a long weekend around here.

– Richard Ward
Jan 20 at 16:12







SW UK, and this is definitely a long weekend around here.

– Richard Ward
Jan 20 at 16:12






14




14





Southern US, and I've heard "long weekend" but it feels less natural than "three-day weekend".

– Hearth
Jan 20 at 19:13





Southern US, and I've heard "long weekend" but it feels less natural than "three-day weekend".

– Hearth
Jan 20 at 19:13




4




4





Canada: long weekend.

– ermanen
Jan 20 at 20:52





Canada: long weekend.

– ermanen
Jan 20 at 20:52













37














In British English, a public holiday is called a "bank holiday", and when it occurs on a Monday, as it often does, the three-day period is called a "bank holiday weekend".






share|improve this answer



















  • 9





    But do note that this is specific to weekends "extended" by a bank holiday. If you have a SAT-SUN-MON off because you've taken some leave from work, that is not a "bank holiday weekend". That's just an extra day off, or as Glorfindel said, a "long weekend".

    – Richard Ward
    Jan 20 at 16:14






  • 1





    @RichardWard note that "Martin Luther King holiday" would be a reasonable comparison to a bank holiday I think

    – UKMonkey
    Jan 20 at 21:00






  • 1





    'Bank Holiday' is not all UK (or did not used to be); just England and Wales, not Scotland, and do not know about NI.

    – Keith
    Jan 20 at 22:31






  • 2





    @Keith There are separate bank holidays for E&W, Scotland, and Northern Ireland, and it's been that way since at least 1971. Although keep in mind that an employer isn't obligated to give you the day off for a bank holiday.

    – LMS
    Jan 21 at 14:42











  • “In British English” or “In Britain”? British English is spoken in more places than Britain, and those places don't all call their public holidays “bank holidays”.

    – SevenSidedDie
    Jan 21 at 20:18


















37














In British English, a public holiday is called a "bank holiday", and when it occurs on a Monday, as it often does, the three-day period is called a "bank holiday weekend".






share|improve this answer



















  • 9





    But do note that this is specific to weekends "extended" by a bank holiday. If you have a SAT-SUN-MON off because you've taken some leave from work, that is not a "bank holiday weekend". That's just an extra day off, or as Glorfindel said, a "long weekend".

    – Richard Ward
    Jan 20 at 16:14






  • 1





    @RichardWard note that "Martin Luther King holiday" would be a reasonable comparison to a bank holiday I think

    – UKMonkey
    Jan 20 at 21:00






  • 1





    'Bank Holiday' is not all UK (or did not used to be); just England and Wales, not Scotland, and do not know about NI.

    – Keith
    Jan 20 at 22:31






  • 2





    @Keith There are separate bank holidays for E&W, Scotland, and Northern Ireland, and it's been that way since at least 1971. Although keep in mind that an employer isn't obligated to give you the day off for a bank holiday.

    – LMS
    Jan 21 at 14:42











  • “In British English” or “In Britain”? British English is spoken in more places than Britain, and those places don't all call their public holidays “bank holidays”.

    – SevenSidedDie
    Jan 21 at 20:18
















37












37








37







In British English, a public holiday is called a "bank holiday", and when it occurs on a Monday, as it often does, the three-day period is called a "bank holiday weekend".






share|improve this answer













In British English, a public holiday is called a "bank holiday", and when it occurs on a Monday, as it often does, the three-day period is called a "bank holiday weekend".







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered Jan 19 at 17:43









BoannBoann

65349




65349








  • 9





    But do note that this is specific to weekends "extended" by a bank holiday. If you have a SAT-SUN-MON off because you've taken some leave from work, that is not a "bank holiday weekend". That's just an extra day off, or as Glorfindel said, a "long weekend".

    – Richard Ward
    Jan 20 at 16:14






  • 1





    @RichardWard note that "Martin Luther King holiday" would be a reasonable comparison to a bank holiday I think

    – UKMonkey
    Jan 20 at 21:00






  • 1





    'Bank Holiday' is not all UK (or did not used to be); just England and Wales, not Scotland, and do not know about NI.

    – Keith
    Jan 20 at 22:31






  • 2





    @Keith There are separate bank holidays for E&W, Scotland, and Northern Ireland, and it's been that way since at least 1971. Although keep in mind that an employer isn't obligated to give you the day off for a bank holiday.

    – LMS
    Jan 21 at 14:42











  • “In British English” or “In Britain”? British English is spoken in more places than Britain, and those places don't all call their public holidays “bank holidays”.

    – SevenSidedDie
    Jan 21 at 20:18
















  • 9





    But do note that this is specific to weekends "extended" by a bank holiday. If you have a SAT-SUN-MON off because you've taken some leave from work, that is not a "bank holiday weekend". That's just an extra day off, or as Glorfindel said, a "long weekend".

    – Richard Ward
    Jan 20 at 16:14






  • 1





    @RichardWard note that "Martin Luther King holiday" would be a reasonable comparison to a bank holiday I think

    – UKMonkey
    Jan 20 at 21:00






  • 1





    'Bank Holiday' is not all UK (or did not used to be); just England and Wales, not Scotland, and do not know about NI.

    – Keith
    Jan 20 at 22:31






  • 2





    @Keith There are separate bank holidays for E&W, Scotland, and Northern Ireland, and it's been that way since at least 1971. Although keep in mind that an employer isn't obligated to give you the day off for a bank holiday.

    – LMS
    Jan 21 at 14:42











  • “In British English” or “In Britain”? British English is spoken in more places than Britain, and those places don't all call their public holidays “bank holidays”.

    – SevenSidedDie
    Jan 21 at 20:18










9




9





But do note that this is specific to weekends "extended" by a bank holiday. If you have a SAT-SUN-MON off because you've taken some leave from work, that is not a "bank holiday weekend". That's just an extra day off, or as Glorfindel said, a "long weekend".

– Richard Ward
Jan 20 at 16:14





But do note that this is specific to weekends "extended" by a bank holiday. If you have a SAT-SUN-MON off because you've taken some leave from work, that is not a "bank holiday weekend". That's just an extra day off, or as Glorfindel said, a "long weekend".

– Richard Ward
Jan 20 at 16:14




1




1





@RichardWard note that "Martin Luther King holiday" would be a reasonable comparison to a bank holiday I think

– UKMonkey
Jan 20 at 21:00





@RichardWard note that "Martin Luther King holiday" would be a reasonable comparison to a bank holiday I think

– UKMonkey
Jan 20 at 21:00




1




1





'Bank Holiday' is not all UK (or did not used to be); just England and Wales, not Scotland, and do not know about NI.

– Keith
Jan 20 at 22:31





'Bank Holiday' is not all UK (or did not used to be); just England and Wales, not Scotland, and do not know about NI.

– Keith
Jan 20 at 22:31




2




2





@Keith There are separate bank holidays for E&W, Scotland, and Northern Ireland, and it's been that way since at least 1971. Although keep in mind that an employer isn't obligated to give you the day off for a bank holiday.

– LMS
Jan 21 at 14:42





@Keith There are separate bank holidays for E&W, Scotland, and Northern Ireland, and it's been that way since at least 1971. Although keep in mind that an employer isn't obligated to give you the day off for a bank holiday.

– LMS
Jan 21 at 14:42













“In British English” or “In Britain”? British English is spoken in more places than Britain, and those places don't all call their public holidays “bank holidays”.

– SevenSidedDie
Jan 21 at 20:18







“In British English” or “In Britain”? British English is spoken in more places than Britain, and those places don't all call their public holidays “bank holidays”.

– SevenSidedDie
Jan 21 at 20:18













30














One more possibility is the phrase holiday weekend. From Merriam-Webster:




a weekend that is preceded or followed by a holiday




This is my go-to phrase in situations like you describe, since it doesn't assume that the other person actually gets the holiday off from work (I don't get MLK Day off, for example; rather, my employer offers events at work celebrating MLK, Jr.'s legacy).



So you could say something like:




How's your holiday weekend shaping up? Do you have Monday off?




It also works for slightly longer holidays, such as (the US) Thanksgiving, or the 4th of July when it falls on a Tuesday or Thursday.






share|improve this answer


























  • This answer seems the most correct for the OP. The selected answer, while also correct, can apply to general situations where a person takes a sick day on Friday or Monday - i.e. not being an actual holiday. (This is based on my Midwestern US variety of English)

    – whatisit
    yesterday













  • Note that this is not appropriate in British English, where "holiday" has a different meaning (= US "vacation", i.e. time off work or away from home). If it weren't for our constant exposure to American media, it would be very confusing to a Brit to hear that someone was working on a "holiday weekend".

    – IMSoP
    yesterday


















30














One more possibility is the phrase holiday weekend. From Merriam-Webster:




a weekend that is preceded or followed by a holiday




This is my go-to phrase in situations like you describe, since it doesn't assume that the other person actually gets the holiday off from work (I don't get MLK Day off, for example; rather, my employer offers events at work celebrating MLK, Jr.'s legacy).



So you could say something like:




How's your holiday weekend shaping up? Do you have Monday off?




It also works for slightly longer holidays, such as (the US) Thanksgiving, or the 4th of July when it falls on a Tuesday or Thursday.






share|improve this answer


























  • This answer seems the most correct for the OP. The selected answer, while also correct, can apply to general situations where a person takes a sick day on Friday or Monday - i.e. not being an actual holiday. (This is based on my Midwestern US variety of English)

    – whatisit
    yesterday













  • Note that this is not appropriate in British English, where "holiday" has a different meaning (= US "vacation", i.e. time off work or away from home). If it weren't for our constant exposure to American media, it would be very confusing to a Brit to hear that someone was working on a "holiday weekend".

    – IMSoP
    yesterday
















30












30








30







One more possibility is the phrase holiday weekend. From Merriam-Webster:




a weekend that is preceded or followed by a holiday




This is my go-to phrase in situations like you describe, since it doesn't assume that the other person actually gets the holiday off from work (I don't get MLK Day off, for example; rather, my employer offers events at work celebrating MLK, Jr.'s legacy).



So you could say something like:




How's your holiday weekend shaping up? Do you have Monday off?




It also works for slightly longer holidays, such as (the US) Thanksgiving, or the 4th of July when it falls on a Tuesday or Thursday.






share|improve this answer















One more possibility is the phrase holiday weekend. From Merriam-Webster:




a weekend that is preceded or followed by a holiday




This is my go-to phrase in situations like you describe, since it doesn't assume that the other person actually gets the holiday off from work (I don't get MLK Day off, for example; rather, my employer offers events at work celebrating MLK, Jr.'s legacy).



So you could say something like:




How's your holiday weekend shaping up? Do you have Monday off?




It also works for slightly longer holidays, such as (the US) Thanksgiving, or the 4th of July when it falls on a Tuesday or Thursday.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Jan 20 at 23:41

























answered Jan 19 at 19:51









1006a1006a

20.8k33887




20.8k33887













  • This answer seems the most correct for the OP. The selected answer, while also correct, can apply to general situations where a person takes a sick day on Friday or Monday - i.e. not being an actual holiday. (This is based on my Midwestern US variety of English)

    – whatisit
    yesterday













  • Note that this is not appropriate in British English, where "holiday" has a different meaning (= US "vacation", i.e. time off work or away from home). If it weren't for our constant exposure to American media, it would be very confusing to a Brit to hear that someone was working on a "holiday weekend".

    – IMSoP
    yesterday





















  • This answer seems the most correct for the OP. The selected answer, while also correct, can apply to general situations where a person takes a sick day on Friday or Monday - i.e. not being an actual holiday. (This is based on my Midwestern US variety of English)

    – whatisit
    yesterday













  • Note that this is not appropriate in British English, where "holiday" has a different meaning (= US "vacation", i.e. time off work or away from home). If it weren't for our constant exposure to American media, it would be very confusing to a Brit to hear that someone was working on a "holiday weekend".

    – IMSoP
    yesterday



















This answer seems the most correct for the OP. The selected answer, while also correct, can apply to general situations where a person takes a sick day on Friday or Monday - i.e. not being an actual holiday. (This is based on my Midwestern US variety of English)

– whatisit
yesterday







This answer seems the most correct for the OP. The selected answer, while also correct, can apply to general situations where a person takes a sick day on Friday or Monday - i.e. not being an actual holiday. (This is based on my Midwestern US variety of English)

– whatisit
yesterday















Note that this is not appropriate in British English, where "holiday" has a different meaning (= US "vacation", i.e. time off work or away from home). If it weren't for our constant exposure to American media, it would be very confusing to a Brit to hear that someone was working on a "holiday weekend".

– IMSoP
yesterday







Note that this is not appropriate in British English, where "holiday" has a different meaning (= US "vacation", i.e. time off work or away from home). If it weren't for our constant exposure to American media, it would be very confusing to a Brit to hear that someone was working on a "holiday weekend".

– IMSoP
yesterday













18














I think we need to coin the phrase, Threekend






share|improve this answer








New contributor




Capricorn1 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
















  • 10





    You could make a case for threekend, as it isn't entirely original. It'd be great if you edited your answer to back it up! As it stands, it might get deleted; it was flagged by the review system as "low quality because of its length and content".

    – tmgr
    Jan 20 at 0:08






  • 7





    I honestly just thought of it at the moment. I didn't think to look at up at the time, but I'm also not surprised I'm not the first. And somebody once wrote, "Brevity is the soul of wit." Apparently not here though. Tough crowd.

    – Capricorn1
    Jan 20 at 13:50






  • 9





    No insult intended in saying threekend isn't original: point is, it's a better answer if you weren't the first to get there. It'll definitely attract more upvotes if you make the case, provide references and back up your answer. That's the standard here: authoritative, referenced answers that explain why they are right, rather than unsourced opinion... or pithy one-liners, no harm to you or your bard! Have a poke round the Help Centre.... and please do stick around.

    – tmgr
    Jan 20 at 14:03






  • 7





    Why do you think we need to coin a phrase??

    – curiousdannii
    Jan 21 at 6:26











  • Heh, I may actually start using this.

    – Lightness Races in Orbit
    yesterday
















18














I think we need to coin the phrase, Threekend






share|improve this answer








New contributor




Capricorn1 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
















  • 10





    You could make a case for threekend, as it isn't entirely original. It'd be great if you edited your answer to back it up! As it stands, it might get deleted; it was flagged by the review system as "low quality because of its length and content".

    – tmgr
    Jan 20 at 0:08






  • 7





    I honestly just thought of it at the moment. I didn't think to look at up at the time, but I'm also not surprised I'm not the first. And somebody once wrote, "Brevity is the soul of wit." Apparently not here though. Tough crowd.

    – Capricorn1
    Jan 20 at 13:50






  • 9





    No insult intended in saying threekend isn't original: point is, it's a better answer if you weren't the first to get there. It'll definitely attract more upvotes if you make the case, provide references and back up your answer. That's the standard here: authoritative, referenced answers that explain why they are right, rather than unsourced opinion... or pithy one-liners, no harm to you or your bard! Have a poke round the Help Centre.... and please do stick around.

    – tmgr
    Jan 20 at 14:03






  • 7





    Why do you think we need to coin a phrase??

    – curiousdannii
    Jan 21 at 6:26











  • Heh, I may actually start using this.

    – Lightness Races in Orbit
    yesterday














18












18








18







I think we need to coin the phrase, Threekend






share|improve this answer








New contributor




Capricorn1 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.










I think we need to coin the phrase, Threekend







share|improve this answer








New contributor




Capricorn1 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer






New contributor




Capricorn1 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









answered Jan 19 at 22:50









Capricorn1Capricorn1

40115




40115




New contributor




Capricorn1 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.





New contributor





Capricorn1 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.






Capricorn1 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.








  • 10





    You could make a case for threekend, as it isn't entirely original. It'd be great if you edited your answer to back it up! As it stands, it might get deleted; it was flagged by the review system as "low quality because of its length and content".

    – tmgr
    Jan 20 at 0:08






  • 7





    I honestly just thought of it at the moment. I didn't think to look at up at the time, but I'm also not surprised I'm not the first. And somebody once wrote, "Brevity is the soul of wit." Apparently not here though. Tough crowd.

    – Capricorn1
    Jan 20 at 13:50






  • 9





    No insult intended in saying threekend isn't original: point is, it's a better answer if you weren't the first to get there. It'll definitely attract more upvotes if you make the case, provide references and back up your answer. That's the standard here: authoritative, referenced answers that explain why they are right, rather than unsourced opinion... or pithy one-liners, no harm to you or your bard! Have a poke round the Help Centre.... and please do stick around.

    – tmgr
    Jan 20 at 14:03






  • 7





    Why do you think we need to coin a phrase??

    – curiousdannii
    Jan 21 at 6:26











  • Heh, I may actually start using this.

    – Lightness Races in Orbit
    yesterday














  • 10





    You could make a case for threekend, as it isn't entirely original. It'd be great if you edited your answer to back it up! As it stands, it might get deleted; it was flagged by the review system as "low quality because of its length and content".

    – tmgr
    Jan 20 at 0:08






  • 7





    I honestly just thought of it at the moment. I didn't think to look at up at the time, but I'm also not surprised I'm not the first. And somebody once wrote, "Brevity is the soul of wit." Apparently not here though. Tough crowd.

    – Capricorn1
    Jan 20 at 13:50






  • 9





    No insult intended in saying threekend isn't original: point is, it's a better answer if you weren't the first to get there. It'll definitely attract more upvotes if you make the case, provide references and back up your answer. That's the standard here: authoritative, referenced answers that explain why they are right, rather than unsourced opinion... or pithy one-liners, no harm to you or your bard! Have a poke round the Help Centre.... and please do stick around.

    – tmgr
    Jan 20 at 14:03






  • 7





    Why do you think we need to coin a phrase??

    – curiousdannii
    Jan 21 at 6:26











  • Heh, I may actually start using this.

    – Lightness Races in Orbit
    yesterday








10




10





You could make a case for threekend, as it isn't entirely original. It'd be great if you edited your answer to back it up! As it stands, it might get deleted; it was flagged by the review system as "low quality because of its length and content".

– tmgr
Jan 20 at 0:08





You could make a case for threekend, as it isn't entirely original. It'd be great if you edited your answer to back it up! As it stands, it might get deleted; it was flagged by the review system as "low quality because of its length and content".

– tmgr
Jan 20 at 0:08




7




7





I honestly just thought of it at the moment. I didn't think to look at up at the time, but I'm also not surprised I'm not the first. And somebody once wrote, "Brevity is the soul of wit." Apparently not here though. Tough crowd.

– Capricorn1
Jan 20 at 13:50





I honestly just thought of it at the moment. I didn't think to look at up at the time, but I'm also not surprised I'm not the first. And somebody once wrote, "Brevity is the soul of wit." Apparently not here though. Tough crowd.

– Capricorn1
Jan 20 at 13:50




9




9





No insult intended in saying threekend isn't original: point is, it's a better answer if you weren't the first to get there. It'll definitely attract more upvotes if you make the case, provide references and back up your answer. That's the standard here: authoritative, referenced answers that explain why they are right, rather than unsourced opinion... or pithy one-liners, no harm to you or your bard! Have a poke round the Help Centre.... and please do stick around.

– tmgr
Jan 20 at 14:03





No insult intended in saying threekend isn't original: point is, it's a better answer if you weren't the first to get there. It'll definitely attract more upvotes if you make the case, provide references and back up your answer. That's the standard here: authoritative, referenced answers that explain why they are right, rather than unsourced opinion... or pithy one-liners, no harm to you or your bard! Have a poke round the Help Centre.... and please do stick around.

– tmgr
Jan 20 at 14:03




7




7





Why do you think we need to coin a phrase??

– curiousdannii
Jan 21 at 6:26





Why do you think we need to coin a phrase??

– curiousdannii
Jan 21 at 6:26













Heh, I may actually start using this.

– Lightness Races in Orbit
yesterday





Heh, I may actually start using this.

– Lightness Races in Orbit
yesterday



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