This question was closed without grading. Reason: Answer found elsewhere
Nov 4, 2023 16:23
1 yr ago
38 viewers *
Italian term
giorno festivo in US EN
Italian to English
Other
General / Conversation / Greetings / Letters
Non mi viene in mente come si chiama un giorno festivo, pertanto non lavorativo, negli Stati Uniti. grazie!
Proposed translations
(English)
5 +2 | National Holiday | Tom in London |
5 +2 | Federal holiday | Janice Giffin |
Proposed translations
+2
3 mins
National Holiday
easy
Note from asker:
grazie per la risposta ma non intendevo NATIONAL HOLIDAY o BANK HOLIDAY per uk. In tialia è giorno festivo anche il sabato e la domenica. Ogni sabato è una national holiday? Non credo ma grazie in italia è GIORNO FERIALE (lu-ve) GIORNO FESTIVO (sa, do) oltre alle feste tipo national holiday ma ogni sabato e domenica sono giorni festivi, questo traducente mi serve |
Peer comment(s):
agree |
philgoddard
: The asker hasn't given any context, but 'weekends and national/public holidays' might fit.
26 mins
|
agree |
Maria G. Grassi, MA AITI
: Agree with Tom and Phil
15 hrs
|
+2
4 hrs
Federal holiday
It's rather confusing in the US because 'national' holiday should mean everybody in the nation should get a day off work (paid). But it is not so. There are 11 federal holidays when offices are closed (Christmas, Thanksgiving, MLK etc.) A state, a municipality or a business can decide whether employees have a day off work (most do) and they can also declare more local holidays. Once every 4 years an extra federal holiday is added for Inauguration day.
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Note added at 6 hrs (2023-11-04 22:25:17 GMT)
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Every dictionary I consulted translated 'giorno' festivo as national holiday, public holiday or, in the US federal holiday. Your question is not so clear. There is the work week (5 or 6 days) and the weekend, which doesn't mean much since many people work on Saturday and /or Sunday. There are 'workdays' and 'non-working days' which means "any day on which an employee is not scheduled or obliged to carry out their regular work hours.
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Note added at 6 hrs (2023-11-04 22:29:04 GMT)
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Reference for the quote in the above added note: https://www.genieai.co/define/non-working-day#:~:text=Non-wo...
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Note added at 6 hrs (2023-11-04 22:25:17 GMT)
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Every dictionary I consulted translated 'giorno' festivo as national holiday, public holiday or, in the US federal holiday. Your question is not so clear. There is the work week (5 or 6 days) and the weekend, which doesn't mean much since many people work on Saturday and /or Sunday. There are 'workdays' and 'non-working days' which means "any day on which an employee is not scheduled or obliged to carry out their regular work hours.
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Note added at 6 hrs (2023-11-04 22:29:04 GMT)
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Reference for the quote in the above added note: https://www.genieai.co/define/non-working-day#:~:text=Non-wo...
Example sentence:
We don’t have “national holidays” in the U.S., as no one is compelled to follow the lead of the federal government in these matters, so the most “official” kind of holidays we have are federal holidays.
Individual states have no obligation to honor federal holidays, but they usually do.
Peer comment(s):
agree |
martini
: non-working days
11 hrs
|
Thanks, martini
|
|
agree |
Michele Fauble
20 hrs
|
Thank you , Michele.
|
|
neutral |
philgoddard
: Only if this relates to the US. I know Alessandra asked for US English, but the question is likely to be about Italy.
20 hrs
|
Discussion
A thank you, and perhaps even some points, would have been nice.
https://www.youmath.it/domande-a-risposte/view/6685-quali-so...
As for public holidays in the United States, they are set by federal, state, and local governments and are often observed by closing government offices or giving government employees paid time off.