Are you kidding me? Only 8:15 to 9:00 then 12:00 to 15:00. I get up at 6:30, and i dont get home till 16:30. Dont act like you have it bad. I shouldnt either. Its not like school is a torture zone.
Well, Mr Vendetta, have you read my other posts then? I don't have a problem with 4 hours a day, it's just that it's spread too much over the day. I have days from 8:00 to 15:00 too, but I have no problems with that.
Saturday and Sunday is WeekEND... End of the week, as in "not the week anymore"... So there's only 5 days in the week:
monday - montag
tuesday - dienstag
wednesday - mittwoch <-- middle of the week
thursday - donnerstag
friday - freitag
To all dutch peeps that said they've always learned sunday was the start of the week... What kind of elementary school did you go to?
Katholiek, Protestants Christelijk, Gereformeerd, of openbaar?
But your able brings me to another interesting observation: 2000 years of christian domination in europe, but still we use old, "pagan" names for the days:
Montag = monday, day to honour germanic diety Mani, god of the moon.
Dienstag = tuesday, day to honour the germanic diety Ziu, Tiu or Tyr, also known as Saxnot, the god of war
Donnerstag = thursday, day to honour the germanic diety Donar or Thor, god of thunder
Freitag = friday, day to honor the germanic diety Freya, goddess of fertility (who is also the origin of the Easterbunny and -eggs...)
Sonntag = Sunday, day to honour the gemranic diety Sunna or Sol, goddess of the sun.
Mittwoch is obvioulsy not religion related, and the german "Samstag" is originating from the jewish Shabbat, so can be regarded as Christian.
Wednesday is the day to honour Woden or Wotan or Odin, the supreme god of germanic mythology
The english saturday on the other hand is the day to honour the roman diety Saturn, god of farming.
EDIT: So pretty mch every weekday has germanic or nordic roots. Only Saturday is out of place with a roman/jewish name... guess I need ot research on that matter, as germanic people would have had definately their own name for this day. So why was it dropped?
I don't know why Saturday was dropped...
I do know that a lot of christian holidays were set to pagan days of feasting to make it easier for them to adopt to the new christian religion.
Christmas being the biggest, was set to the days of the pagan midwinter soltice.
Yeah, but all these days have been renamed to something christian... not the weekdays though. But perhaps 't was not to confuse weekdays with holydays designated to saints...
And what if I don't like the Christian way of thinking, nor the International Standardization Organisation? From this day forth, the thursday shall be the start of the week for all things LFS!
Well, for me it has always been Sunday as the start of the week, but Monday as the start of the *working* week (same as Saturday would be the end of the week, but Friday the end of the working week).
Well then you can just scrap the entire date system and come up with something new. After all, you have your years defined by Christ's birth and you have the start of the week defined by Jewish/Christian tradition.
Or shall we declare Friday the start of the week (oh wait, the concept of week is from the Bible too... we'll need to scrap that ) and make it the Year of the Sprocket?
You do realise that the majority of ISO standards are not universally accepted by countries. Despite the name, the ISO group is not wholly international
Go a short period back in history and you will find drastic changes that were made to the Russian language, prior to which the names of the week were not the same (this is if I remember correctly from history classes of years gone by... But that is unlikey )