Days of the Week in Spanish with EdVanna
Learning the days of the week in Spanish is one of the first practical steps toward fluency—and with EdVanna’s immersive, conversation-based approach, mastering this essential vocabulary becomes natural and effective.
Why Learning the Days of the Week in Spanish Matters
Understanding and confidently using the days of the week is key to participating in everyday conversations. Whether you’re planning a trip, booking appointments, or discussing your schedule, these words come up constantly. At EdVanna.com, we focus on conversational Spanish classes led by native speakers—so learning this vocabulary isn’t just theoretical; it’s immediately useful.
📅 Example: “¿Qué haces el sábado?” (“What are you doing on Saturday?”)
Our online Spanish classes are designed for real-world use and provide tools to build fluency faster than traditional methods.
Days of the Week in Spanish and Their English Equivalents
Here’s a breakdown of the days in both languages:
- Lunes – Monday
- Martes – Tuesday
- Miércoles – Wednesday
- Jueves – Thursday
- Viernes – Friday
- Sábado – Saturday
- Domingo – Sunday
All days of the week in Spanish are masculine and not capitalized, unless at the start of a sentence. EdVanna’s Spanish immersion course helps reinforce these grammar nuances through live practice.
Pronunciation Tips with Native Support
Spanish pronunciation can feel tricky at first, especially with days like miércoles or sábado. But with Spanish classes with native speakers, you’ll get instant feedback and correction in every session.
Tips to keep in mind:
- Emphasize the accented syllables: miér-co-les, sá-ba-do.
- Practice through two-person Spanish conversations with your teacher and peers.
🗣️ With EdVanna, pronunciation isn’t memorized—it’s mastered through real interaction.
How to Use the Days in Real Conversations
We teach students how to go beyond memorization. You’ll learn to:
- Talk about your weekly routine: Trabajo los lunes y estudio los martes.
- Schedule plans: Nos vemos el jueves por la tarde.
- Ask questions: ¿Qué haces el domingo?
These examples come alive during video call-based classes, making learning Spanish through video calls highly effective.
Grammatical Rules You Should Know
- No capitalization: Unlike in English, Spanish days aren’t capitalized.
- Articles change meaning:
- El lunes = this Monday
- Los lunes = every Monday
- El lunes = this Monday
- Consistent gender: All days are masculine (el lunes, los jueves).
With EdVanna’s practical guidance, you learn grammar while speaking—no need to study disconnected rules.
Easy Ways to Remember the Days
EdVanna uses strategies that work:
- Mnemotechnics and associations with real-life routines.
- Native-led songs and rhythm-based repetition.
- Real dialogue practice, not just online Spanish exercises.
We focus on helping you learn Spanish fast by embedding vocabulary into meaningful conversations.
Learn with EdVanna and Start Speaking with Confidence
Forget passive memorization. EdVanna is more than a course—it’s a Spanish learning platform that brings together:
- Online Spanish classes for adults
- Live conversation with native speakers
- A supportive learning community
- A clear path to fluency through language immersion Spanish
If you’re wondering how to learn Spanish from scratch, this is where your journey starts.
Start Speaking Spanish Today, Not Someday
Mastering the days of the week in Spanish opens the door to real conversation. But with EdVanna, that’s just the beginning. Join a program built to help you speak Spanish correctly, connect with others, and grow in confidence—week by week.


