When does вечер end? When does ночь begin (this alone is rather easy)? I would know which hours there is вечер and ночь simultaneously. Thank you.
When does вечер end? When does ночь begin (this alone is rather easy)? I would know which hours there is вечер and ночь simultaneously. Thank you.
It's a really difficult question. Everybody sets this limit for himself. I think, night begins when I fall asleep... unless I'm awake all night through.
I think ночь is later than the English "night". I think it's more after midnight.
Ingenting kan stoppa mig
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I agree.
Night begins since midnight. Night and evening exist simultaneously about 12 p.m. (or maybe for some people a bit earlier). You can hear both "12 вечера" and "12 ночи".
Judging by the noun we use when telling time ("семь часов вечера", "два часа дня", etc.) the shedule looks like this:
1-2 - ночь
3-4 - ночь/утро
5-10 - утрo
11 - утро/день
12-15 - день
16-17 - день/вечер
18-22 - вечер
23-24 - вечер/ночь
The way I feel:
1-4 - ночь
5-11 - утро
12-17 - день
18-24 - вечер
* - Russian "hours" system is used
Absolutely right. Ночь is actually the time when people sleep. If you can say "I talked to him last night" in English, "Я говорил с ним прошлой ночью" would sound quite strange in Russian. At least like you've spent the night (till the morning) in the same flat as he has.Originally Posted by TATY
In Russian, all nationalities and their corresponding languages start with a lower-case letter.
Thanks for your wide explanation.
English grammar note: Night begins at midnight.Originally Posted by gRomoZeka
Thanks.Originally Posted by doninphxaz
I have a question too... Since it's "two o'clock in the morning", is 2am really considered morning?
Is it a question for Americans or for Russians?Originally Posted by Indra
I'd say it's still night.
Cocos,
по-русски "2 часа утра" пока еще слышать не приходилось
Originally Posted by Cocos
In Russian, all nationalities and their corresponding languages start with a lower-case letter.
What a weird question.
"a.m." has nothing to do with "morning". It means "before noon/midday", so strictly speaking it refers to the first 12 hours of the day, i.e. both to night and morning.
But in English they say exactly "two o'clock in the morning", meaning "2 часа ночи".Originally Posted by gRomoZeka
In Russian, all nationalities and their corresponding languages start with a lower-case letter.
Well, yeah. They do. Действительно странно...Originally Posted by Оля
Well, morning and night are somewhat separate from AM/PM in terms of translation to, let's say, Russian.
I mean, we have morning and then afternoon. Afternoon being after noon aka 12 PM.
We need AM and PM because we don't use the same twenty-four hour schedule (in America we call it Army time).
It's me again My next question, is it ok to say "Is 2am really considered morning?" or "... really considered to be morning?", or both are incorrect?Originally Posted by Indra
Both are fine. (I'm a native speaker of US English.)Originally Posted by Indra
doninphxaz
thank you
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