🇮🇹 Italian

Days & Months in Italian

Italian days and months are lowercase, musical, and built from Latin roots that English speakers can often recognize. The system includes one elegant grammar feature: adding the article il before a day turns it from a specific reference into a habitual one. This guide covers all the vocabulary, date formats, and the small rules that make Italian dates flow naturally.

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Days of the Week

The Italian week begins on lunedì (Monday). Days from Monday to Friday end in -dì (from the Latin dies, meaning "day"). The weekend days break this pattern.

ItalianEnglish
Pronunciation
lunedìMonday
loo-neh-DEE
martedìTuesday
mahr-teh-DEE
mercoledìWednesday
mehr-koh-leh-DEE
giovedìThursday
joh-veh-DEE
venerdìFriday
veh-nehr-DEE
sabatoSaturday
SAH-bah-toh
domenicaSunday
doh-MEH-nee-kah
Pro Tip

Days ending in -dì are masculine and invariable (no plural change): il lunedì, i lunedì. But sabato is masculine with regular plural (i sabati), and domenica is the only feminine day (la domenica, le domeniche).

Months of the Year

Italian months are all masculine and lowercase. Most are immediately recognizable to English speakers.

ItalianEnglish
Pronunciation
gennaioJanuary
jehn-NAH-yoh
febbraioFebruary
fehb-BRAH-yoh
marzoMarch
MAHR-tsoh
aprileApril
ah-PREE-leh
maggioMay
MAHD-joh
giugnoJune
JOON-yoh
luglioJuly
LOOL-yoh
agostoAugust
ah-GOHS-toh
settembreSeptember
seht-TEHM-breh
ottobreOctober
oht-TOH-breh
novembreNovember
noh-VEHM-breh
dicembreDecember
dee-CHEHM-breh

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The Article Rule: Specific vs. Habitual

This is the most important grammar point for using days in Italian:

Common Mistake

Remember: domenica is the only feminine day, so it uses la for habitual: la domenica. All other days use il: il lunedì, il martedì, etc.

Writing Dates

Italian dates follow the pattern il + number + month + year:

Prepositions with Months

Useful Expressions

Frequently Asked Questions

Are days and months capitalized in Italian?

No. Italian treats days and months as common nouns, so they are always lowercase: lunedì, gennaio. The only exception is when they appear at the beginning of a sentence.

How do I express habitual days in Italian?

Use the definite article il before the day: il lunedì means "on Mondays" or "every Monday." Without the article, lunedì refers to a specific Monday. This is the same pattern as French (le lundi).

How do I write dates in Italian?

Italian uses the format day + month + year: il 5 marzo 2026. For the first of the month, use the ordinal primo: il primo gennaio (January 1st). All other dates use cardinal numbers: il due febbraio (February 2nd).

What prepositions go with days and months?

Use di + article for habitual days: di lunedì or il lunedì. Use a or in for months: a gennaio or in gennaio (in January). For specific dates: il 5 marzo (on March 5th).