Suppose it's Sunday April 7. Someone says something will happen next Friday.
Invariably they feel they are referring to Friday April 19, and not to Friday April 12.
Yet the dictionary makes it clear that next Friday is April 12.
Dictionary says this of next:
immediately following in time or order
nearest in space or position;
immediately adjoining without intervening space
at the time or occasion immediately following
In other words, it's the superlative of near: near, nearer, nearest or next.
Thus we use it to express the absence of intervening objects or events:
Next in line.
Next door.
Next year.
Our next President.
In the next room.
Next, he addressed the problem of health care.
People have no problem using next correctly in any of the listed case above.
Only, it seems, when next is applied to a day does it become common to insert an intervening object. Next Friday is taken to mean Friday after next. Amazing! If you recursively apply that definition, you get, in turn, Friday after Friday after next, then Friday after Friday after Friday after next ... and so on. In other words, Next Friday, if it's even defined, will never come! It's like "Tomorrow, Tomorrow, I love you Tomorrow, you're always a day away." Next Friday is always [at least] a week away!
Suppose it's Sunday April 7th. If next Friday means April 19, then it's not the Friday that immediately follows in time, as the definition of next says it should. Rather, there is an intervening Friday. What do we call that Friday? Well, most would call it This Friday.
What's that all about, and why is "Next Friday" so ambiguous, when next week or next month or next year is not?
I have a theory that I'll share, after some cracks have been taken at this.
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bonanova
Suppose it's Sunday April 7. Someone says something will happen next Friday.
Invariably they feel they are referring to Friday April 19, and not to Friday April 12.
Yet the dictionary makes it clear that next Friday is April 12.
Dictionary says this of next:
- immediately following in time or order
- nearest in space or position;
- immediately adjoining without intervening space
- at the time or occasion immediately following
In other words, it's the superlative of near: near, nearer, nearest or next.Thus we use it to express the absence of intervening objects or events:
People have no problem using next correctly in any of the listed case above.
Only, it seems, when next is applied to a day does it become common to insert an intervening object. Next Friday is taken to mean Friday after next. Amazing! If you recursively apply that definition, you get, in turn, Friday after Friday after next, then Friday after Friday after Friday after next ... and so on. In other words, Next Friday, if it's even defined, will never come! It's like "Tomorrow, Tomorrow, I love you Tomorrow, you're always a day away." Next Friday is always [at least] a week away!
Suppose it's Sunday April 7th. If next Friday means April 19, then it's not the Friday that immediately follows in time, as the definition of next says it should. Rather, there is an intervening Friday. What do we call that Friday? Well, most would call it This Friday.
What's that all about, and why is "Next Friday" so ambiguous, when next week or next month or next year is not?
I have a theory that I'll share, after some cracks have been taken at this.
Edit: see post 7.
Add pointer to post 7
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