A1 Collocation Neutral

Ish kuni

Work day

Phrase in 30 Seconds

Ish kuni refers to a standard working day, typically Monday through Friday, used for scheduling and professional appointments.

  • Means: A standard day dedicated to professional work or business operations.
  • Used in: Scheduling meetings, checking bank hours, or discussing delivery times.
  • Don't confuse: With 'ishchi kuni', which can sometimes imply a specific shift or worker's day.
💼 (Work) + ☀️ (Day) = 🗓️ (Official Workday)

Explanation at your level:

In A1, 'Ish kuni' is a basic vocabulary item. You use it to talk about your daily routine. It helps you say when you work and when you rest. It is a simple combination of 'work' and 'day'. You should learn it alongside the days of the week like Dushanba (Monday).
At the A2 level, you start using 'Ish kuni' in more functional contexts, like understanding business hours or delivery times. You learn to use the plural form 'ish kunlari' and add simple time expressions like 'har kuni' (every day) or 'haftada besh kun' (five days a week).
B1 learners use 'Ish kuni' to navigate professional environments. You can explain your work schedule in detail, discuss deadlines (e.g., 'three workdays from now'), and understand the difference between a 'full workday' and a 'shortened' one. You start using it with more complex case endings.
At B2, you understand the legal and contractual implications of 'Ish kuni'. You can read employment contracts where 'ish kuni' defines your obligations. You also recognize how it differs from 'mehnat kuni' (labor day) and can use it in formal correspondence with banks or government agencies.
C1 mastery involves understanding the sociolinguistic nuances of the 'ish kuni' in Uzbekistan, such as the transition from Soviet-era labor concepts to modern market-driven schedules. You can discuss labor laws and the economic impact of public holidays on the number of 'ish kunlari' in a month.
At C2, you analyze 'Ish kuni' as a linguistic construct within the Turkic izafet system. You can discuss the etymological journey of 'ish' and 'kun' and how this collocation reflects the shift from agrarian to industrial temporalities in Central Asian history, using near-native precision in academic or legal discourse.

Bedeutung

A standard day for professional duties.

🌍

Kultureller Hintergrund

The 6-day work week is still common in public schools and some government offices, meaning Saturday is often an 'ish kuni'. During the two major holidays, Eid al-Fitr and Eid al-Adha, the government often reshuffles 'ish kunlari' to create a long weekend, making a Sunday a workday in exchange for a weekday off. Tea culture is inseparable from the 'ish kuni'. Work often stops for 'choy tanaffusi' (tea break). Hospitality extends to the workday. If you have a business meeting on an 'ish kuni', it's culturally expected to offer or be offered lunch (usually Palov).

💡

The Magic '-i'

Never forget the '-i' at the end. Without it, the phrase is grammatically incomplete in Uzbek.

⚠️

Saturday Surprise

In Uzbekistan, always double-check if Saturday is an 'ish kuni' for the person you are meeting!

Bedeutung

A standard day for professional duties.

💡

The Magic '-i'

Never forget the '-i' at the end. Without it, the phrase is grammatically incomplete in Uzbek.

⚠️

Saturday Surprise

In Uzbekistan, always double-check if Saturday is an 'ish kuni' for the person you are meeting!

🎯

Plural Order

Remember: Kun + lar + i. The plural comes before the possessive suffix.

Teste dich selbst

Fill in the blank with the correct form of 'Ish kuni'.

Dushanbadan jumagacha besh ______ bor.

✓ Richtig! ✗ Nicht ganz. Richtige Antwort: ish kuni

When following a number like 'besh', the noun stays in the singular form in Uzbek.

Which sentence is grammatically correct?

Choose the correct sentence:

✓ Richtig! ✗ Nicht ganz. Richtige Antwort: Bugun mening birinchi ish kunim.

Because of 'mening' (my), you need the 1st person possessive suffix '-im' instead of the 3rd person '-i'.

Complete the dialogue.

A: Buyurtmam qachon keladi? B: ______ keyin keladi.

✓ Richtig! ✗ Nicht ganz. Richtige Antwort: Ikki ish kunidan

The ablative case '-dan' is used here to mean 'after two workdays'.

Match the phrase to the situation.

Where would you see '3-5 ish kuni'?

✓ Richtig! ✗ Nicht ganz. Richtige Antwort: A delivery app

'Ish kuni' is standard for delivery estimates.

🎉 Ergebnis: /4

Visuelle Lernhilfen

Types of Days in Uzbek

💼

Work

  • Ish kuni
  • To'liq ish kuni
  • Qisqa ish kuni
🛌

Rest

  • Dam olish kuni
  • Ta'til
  • Bayram

Häufig gestellte Fragen

10 Fragen

It is neutral and used in both formal (contracts) and informal (chatting with friends) contexts.

Use 'Ish kunlari'.

It depends on the organization. In many Uzbek state offices, Saturday is a workday.

No, it must be 'ish kuni' because it is a compound noun requiring a possessive suffix.

The opposite is 'dam olish kuni' (day off).

Birinchi ish kuni.

Usually 'o'qish kuni' is used for school, but 'ish kuni' is understood.

Uch ish kuni ichida.

Only at the beginning of a sentence. It is not a proper noun.

Then Sunday is your 'ish kuni', even if it's a 'dam olish kuni' for others.

Verwandte Redewendungen

🔗

Ish vaqti

similar

Working hours

🔗

Dam olish kuni

contrast

Day off / Weekend

🔗

Hafta kuni

builds on

Day of the week

🔗

Ish haftasi

builds on

Work week

🔗

Mehnat kuni

specialized form

Labor Day

Wo du es verwendest

🏦

At the Bank

Mijoz: Pul qachon tushadi?

Bankir: Ikki ish kuni ichida tushadi.

formal
🤝

Job Interview

Ish beruvchi: Sizda haftada necha ish kuni bor?

Nomzod: Men besh ish kuni ishlashga tayyorman.

formal
📦

Ordering Food/Goods

Xaridor: Yetkazib berish necha kun?

Sotuvchi: Keyingi ish kuni olib boramiz.

neutral
📱

Talking to a Friend

Do'st 1: Bugun aylanamizmi?

Do'st 2: Yo'q, bugun ish kuni, juda charchadim.

informal
🎓

At School/University

Talaba: Shanba ish kunimi?

O'qituvchi: Ha, shanba ham o'qish kuni.

neutral
🏥

Doctor's Appointment

Bemor: Tahlillar qachon tayyor bo'ladi?

Hamshira: Bir ish kunidan keyin keling.

formal
📅

Office Planning

Boshliq: Bu ishni qaysi ish kunida tugatasiz?

Xodim: Chorshanba ish kunida tugataman.

neutral

Memorize It

Mnemonic

Think of 'Ish' as 'Each' and 'Kun' as 'Sun'. 'Each Sun' (day) I go to work.

Visual Association

Imagine a bright sun (Kun) wearing a professional tie and carrying a briefcase (Ish). This is the 'Ish kuni' sun!

Rhyme

Ish kuni - ishla, dam olish kuni - uxla! (Workday - work, day off - sleep!)

Story

Anvar wakes up on Monday. He sees the sun and says 'Ish kuni boshlandi' (The workday has started). He grabs his bag and goes to the office. On Sunday, he sees the sun and says 'Bu ish kuni emas' (This is not a workday), and goes back to sleep.

Word Web

IshKunIshchiIshlashKunduziHaftaSmenaVaqt

Herausforderung

Try to count how many 'ish kunlari' you have this month using Uzbek numbers.

In Other Languages

Spanish high

Día laborable

Spanish uses an adjective-noun structure, Uzbek uses noun-noun possessive.

French moderate

Jour ouvrable

French focuses on the 'opening' of business, Uzbek on the 'act of working'.

German high

Werktag

German is a single compound word, Uzbek is two words linked by a suffix.

Japanese high

営業日 (Eigyōbi)

Japanese uses 'business' (eigyō) rather than 'work' (ish).

Arabic high

يوم عمل (Yawm 'amal)

The word order is the same, but Uzbek adds a specific suffix (-i) to the second noun.

Chinese high

工作日 (Gōngzuòrì)

Chinese doesn't require grammatical markers like the Uzbek suffix.

Korean moderate

평일 (Pyeong-il)

Korean emphasizes 'weekday' vs 'weekend', Uzbek emphasizes 'work' vs 'rest'.

Portuguese moderate

Dia útil

The conceptual focus is on 'utility' in Portuguese and 'labor' in Uzbek.

Easily Confused

Ish kuni vs. Ishchi kuni

Learners think 'ishchi' (worker) makes it more specific.

Use 'ish kuni' for the day itself. 'Ishchi' is only for the person.

Ish kuni vs. Kun tartibi

Both involve 'kun' (day).

'Kun tartibi' means 'agenda' or 'daily routine', not the workday itself.

FAQ (10)

It is neutral and used in both formal (contracts) and informal (chatting with friends) contexts.

Use 'Ish kunlari'.

It depends on the organization. In many Uzbek state offices, Saturday is a workday.

No, it must be 'ish kuni' because it is a compound noun requiring a possessive suffix.

The opposite is 'dam olish kuni' (day off).

Birinchi ish kuni.

Usually 'o'qish kuni' is used for school, but 'ish kuni' is understood.

Uch ish kuni ichida.

Only at the beginning of a sentence. It is not a proper noun.

Then Sunday is your 'ish kuni', even if it's a 'dam olish kuni' for others.

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