Translating “day one” into Latin












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What would be the ideal translation of ‘one day’ and ‘day one’? I.e. you can choose to do something ‘one day’, or today could be ‘day one’ if you get started now.










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    5














    What would be the ideal translation of ‘one day’ and ‘day one’? I.e. you can choose to do something ‘one day’, or today could be ‘day one’ if you get started now.










    share|improve this question



























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      What would be the ideal translation of ‘one day’ and ‘day one’? I.e. you can choose to do something ‘one day’, or today could be ‘day one’ if you get started now.










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      What would be the ideal translation of ‘one day’ and ‘day one’? I.e. you can choose to do something ‘one day’, or today could be ‘day one’ if you get started now.







      translation english-to-latin-translation






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      edited Nov 23 '18 at 10:29









      luchonacho

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      asked Nov 23 '18 at 3:49









      Jack

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          A single day ("this task can be finished in one day") would be diēs ūnus/ūna. The first day ("I've been working since day one") would be diēs prīmus/prīma. Some unspecified day ("I'll get to it one day") would be diēs aliquis.



          (The gender of diēs is a bit weird, as it can be either masculine or feminine. See this question for more explanation. Ūnus and prīmus look different in the masculine and feminine, but aliquis doesn't because it's nice like that.)






          share|improve this answer





















          • Awesome, thank you! So a masculine version of ‘today is day one’ would include ‘dies primus’?
            – Jack
            Nov 23 '18 at 8:09












          • @Jack Indeed! "Diēs est prīmus", off the top of my head, is a nice concise way to say that. Literally, "[this] day is [the] first [one]"—Latin tends to leave out unnecessary words that can be understood from context.
            – Draconis
            Nov 23 '18 at 15:20










          • Awesome. Thanks again for your help!
            – Jack
            Nov 29 '18 at 6:30











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          1 Answer
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          1 Answer
          1






          active

          oldest

          votes









          active

          oldest

          votes






          active

          oldest

          votes









          6














          A single day ("this task can be finished in one day") would be diēs ūnus/ūna. The first day ("I've been working since day one") would be diēs prīmus/prīma. Some unspecified day ("I'll get to it one day") would be diēs aliquis.



          (The gender of diēs is a bit weird, as it can be either masculine or feminine. See this question for more explanation. Ūnus and prīmus look different in the masculine and feminine, but aliquis doesn't because it's nice like that.)






          share|improve this answer





















          • Awesome, thank you! So a masculine version of ‘today is day one’ would include ‘dies primus’?
            – Jack
            Nov 23 '18 at 8:09












          • @Jack Indeed! "Diēs est prīmus", off the top of my head, is a nice concise way to say that. Literally, "[this] day is [the] first [one]"—Latin tends to leave out unnecessary words that can be understood from context.
            – Draconis
            Nov 23 '18 at 15:20










          • Awesome. Thanks again for your help!
            – Jack
            Nov 29 '18 at 6:30
















          6














          A single day ("this task can be finished in one day") would be diēs ūnus/ūna. The first day ("I've been working since day one") would be diēs prīmus/prīma. Some unspecified day ("I'll get to it one day") would be diēs aliquis.



          (The gender of diēs is a bit weird, as it can be either masculine or feminine. See this question for more explanation. Ūnus and prīmus look different in the masculine and feminine, but aliquis doesn't because it's nice like that.)






          share|improve this answer





















          • Awesome, thank you! So a masculine version of ‘today is day one’ would include ‘dies primus’?
            – Jack
            Nov 23 '18 at 8:09












          • @Jack Indeed! "Diēs est prīmus", off the top of my head, is a nice concise way to say that. Literally, "[this] day is [the] first [one]"—Latin tends to leave out unnecessary words that can be understood from context.
            – Draconis
            Nov 23 '18 at 15:20










          • Awesome. Thanks again for your help!
            – Jack
            Nov 29 '18 at 6:30














          6












          6








          6






          A single day ("this task can be finished in one day") would be diēs ūnus/ūna. The first day ("I've been working since day one") would be diēs prīmus/prīma. Some unspecified day ("I'll get to it one day") would be diēs aliquis.



          (The gender of diēs is a bit weird, as it can be either masculine or feminine. See this question for more explanation. Ūnus and prīmus look different in the masculine and feminine, but aliquis doesn't because it's nice like that.)






          share|improve this answer












          A single day ("this task can be finished in one day") would be diēs ūnus/ūna. The first day ("I've been working since day one") would be diēs prīmus/prīma. Some unspecified day ("I'll get to it one day") would be diēs aliquis.



          (The gender of diēs is a bit weird, as it can be either masculine or feminine. See this question for more explanation. Ūnus and prīmus look different in the masculine and feminine, but aliquis doesn't because it's nice like that.)







          share|improve this answer












          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer










          answered Nov 23 '18 at 4:56









          Draconis

          14.4k11960




          14.4k11960












          • Awesome, thank you! So a masculine version of ‘today is day one’ would include ‘dies primus’?
            – Jack
            Nov 23 '18 at 8:09












          • @Jack Indeed! "Diēs est prīmus", off the top of my head, is a nice concise way to say that. Literally, "[this] day is [the] first [one]"—Latin tends to leave out unnecessary words that can be understood from context.
            – Draconis
            Nov 23 '18 at 15:20










          • Awesome. Thanks again for your help!
            – Jack
            Nov 29 '18 at 6:30


















          • Awesome, thank you! So a masculine version of ‘today is day one’ would include ‘dies primus’?
            – Jack
            Nov 23 '18 at 8:09












          • @Jack Indeed! "Diēs est prīmus", off the top of my head, is a nice concise way to say that. Literally, "[this] day is [the] first [one]"—Latin tends to leave out unnecessary words that can be understood from context.
            – Draconis
            Nov 23 '18 at 15:20










          • Awesome. Thanks again for your help!
            – Jack
            Nov 29 '18 at 6:30
















          Awesome, thank you! So a masculine version of ‘today is day one’ would include ‘dies primus’?
          – Jack
          Nov 23 '18 at 8:09






          Awesome, thank you! So a masculine version of ‘today is day one’ would include ‘dies primus’?
          – Jack
          Nov 23 '18 at 8:09














          @Jack Indeed! "Diēs est prīmus", off the top of my head, is a nice concise way to say that. Literally, "[this] day is [the] first [one]"—Latin tends to leave out unnecessary words that can be understood from context.
          – Draconis
          Nov 23 '18 at 15:20




          @Jack Indeed! "Diēs est prīmus", off the top of my head, is a nice concise way to say that. Literally, "[this] day is [the] first [one]"—Latin tends to leave out unnecessary words that can be understood from context.
          – Draconis
          Nov 23 '18 at 15:20












          Awesome. Thanks again for your help!
          – Jack
          Nov 29 '18 at 6:30




          Awesome. Thanks again for your help!
          – Jack
          Nov 29 '18 at 6:30


















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