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Sábado

Sábado is the Spanish name for the sixth day of the week. In most Spanish-speaking countries it is the day between viernes and domingo and commonly lies in the weekend, depending on local work schedules. In the ISO 8601 system, weeks begin on Monday, which places sábado as the sixth day of the standard week.

Etymology: The term sábado comes from Latin Sabbatum, from Hebrew Shabbat, the Sabbath. The word carries the

Usage and culture: Saturday is typically a day for shopping, markets, sports, and leisure, with variations by

Other notes: The term is not used only for secular timekeeping; it appears in calendar phrases and

same
root
as
the
Sabbath
observance
in
Judaic
tradition;
Spanish
preserves
the
link
in
the
name
and
its
stress
pattern.
country
and
region.
In
many
Spanish-speaking
countries,
many
businesses
operate
on
Saturdays,
while
public
offices
may
close
or
have
shortened
hours
on
weekends.
Religious
traditions:
for
Jews
and
some
Christian
groups,
the
Sabbath
is
observed
from
Friday
evening
to
Saturday
evening;
some
Christian
denominations
in
Spanish-speaking
regions
refer
to
Holy
Saturday
as
Sábado
Santo;
in
other
contexts
Sábado
de
Gloria
is
used
for
the
day
before
Easter
Sunday.
events
named
after
the
day,
such
as
Sábado
de
carnaval
or
Sábado
Santo.