How to address today and the following 9 days












3














Would you think "the next 10 days" includes today?



If not, would there be a clearer way to put it, to refer to today and the following 9 days?










share|improve this question



























    3














    Would you think "the next 10 days" includes today?



    If not, would there be a clearer way to put it, to refer to today and the following 9 days?










    share|improve this question

























      3












      3








      3







      Would you think "the next 10 days" includes today?



      If not, would there be a clearer way to put it, to refer to today and the following 9 days?










      share|improve this question













      Would you think "the next 10 days" includes today?



      If not, would there be a clearer way to put it, to refer to today and the following 9 days?







      meaning phrasing






      share|improve this question













      share|improve this question











      share|improve this question




      share|improve this question










      asked 33 mins ago









      Min Andy Choi

      254




      254






















          1 Answer
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          4














          You actually already expressed it—twice—in your question.



          Consider the singular case:




          I'll do it the next day.




          It's a relative term. It doesn't mean today—or the specific day previously referenced in a discussion. It means the day following.



          Similarly, the next X days means the plural number of days following.



          If you wake up in the morning and want to express something that will happen over a 10-day period, including today, you would say:




          I'll be working on it today and the next 9 days.




          There is no simpler phrasing that I can think of.





          Note that there might be some ambiguity over the use of the word next.



          If, at 6:00 p.m., you say the next 10 days, it's likely that you mean tomorrow and the next 9 days. Most people wouldn't bother specifying tomorrow in that case.



          But if there's room for misinterpretation, it's always good to be explicit.






          share|improve this answer























          • I see you're quite active on this forum, many thanks for helping out people like me. I do have a follow-up question though, if you wouldn't mind. What about "over the next 10 days" but without "including today"? Does it refer to today and the next 9 days?
            – Min Andy Choi
            14 mins ago










          • @MinAndyChoi As per my updated answer, it depends on the context. Depending on when it's said, it might be taken to include today—or it might not. Different people will interpret it differently.
            – Jason Bassford
            12 mins ago












          • Okay that's what I thought. Your answer really helped clear up the picture. Thank you very much.
            – Min Andy Choi
            10 mins ago











          Your Answer








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          1 Answer
          1






          active

          oldest

          votes








          1 Answer
          1






          active

          oldest

          votes









          active

          oldest

          votes






          active

          oldest

          votes









          4














          You actually already expressed it—twice—in your question.



          Consider the singular case:




          I'll do it the next day.




          It's a relative term. It doesn't mean today—or the specific day previously referenced in a discussion. It means the day following.



          Similarly, the next X days means the plural number of days following.



          If you wake up in the morning and want to express something that will happen over a 10-day period, including today, you would say:




          I'll be working on it today and the next 9 days.




          There is no simpler phrasing that I can think of.





          Note that there might be some ambiguity over the use of the word next.



          If, at 6:00 p.m., you say the next 10 days, it's likely that you mean tomorrow and the next 9 days. Most people wouldn't bother specifying tomorrow in that case.



          But if there's room for misinterpretation, it's always good to be explicit.






          share|improve this answer























          • I see you're quite active on this forum, many thanks for helping out people like me. I do have a follow-up question though, if you wouldn't mind. What about "over the next 10 days" but without "including today"? Does it refer to today and the next 9 days?
            – Min Andy Choi
            14 mins ago










          • @MinAndyChoi As per my updated answer, it depends on the context. Depending on when it's said, it might be taken to include today—or it might not. Different people will interpret it differently.
            – Jason Bassford
            12 mins ago












          • Okay that's what I thought. Your answer really helped clear up the picture. Thank you very much.
            – Min Andy Choi
            10 mins ago
















          4














          You actually already expressed it—twice—in your question.



          Consider the singular case:




          I'll do it the next day.




          It's a relative term. It doesn't mean today—or the specific day previously referenced in a discussion. It means the day following.



          Similarly, the next X days means the plural number of days following.



          If you wake up in the morning and want to express something that will happen over a 10-day period, including today, you would say:




          I'll be working on it today and the next 9 days.




          There is no simpler phrasing that I can think of.





          Note that there might be some ambiguity over the use of the word next.



          If, at 6:00 p.m., you say the next 10 days, it's likely that you mean tomorrow and the next 9 days. Most people wouldn't bother specifying tomorrow in that case.



          But if there's room for misinterpretation, it's always good to be explicit.






          share|improve this answer























          • I see you're quite active on this forum, many thanks for helping out people like me. I do have a follow-up question though, if you wouldn't mind. What about "over the next 10 days" but without "including today"? Does it refer to today and the next 9 days?
            – Min Andy Choi
            14 mins ago










          • @MinAndyChoi As per my updated answer, it depends on the context. Depending on when it's said, it might be taken to include today—or it might not. Different people will interpret it differently.
            – Jason Bassford
            12 mins ago












          • Okay that's what I thought. Your answer really helped clear up the picture. Thank you very much.
            – Min Andy Choi
            10 mins ago














          4












          4








          4






          You actually already expressed it—twice—in your question.



          Consider the singular case:




          I'll do it the next day.




          It's a relative term. It doesn't mean today—or the specific day previously referenced in a discussion. It means the day following.



          Similarly, the next X days means the plural number of days following.



          If you wake up in the morning and want to express something that will happen over a 10-day period, including today, you would say:




          I'll be working on it today and the next 9 days.




          There is no simpler phrasing that I can think of.





          Note that there might be some ambiguity over the use of the word next.



          If, at 6:00 p.m., you say the next 10 days, it's likely that you mean tomorrow and the next 9 days. Most people wouldn't bother specifying tomorrow in that case.



          But if there's room for misinterpretation, it's always good to be explicit.






          share|improve this answer














          You actually already expressed it—twice—in your question.



          Consider the singular case:




          I'll do it the next day.




          It's a relative term. It doesn't mean today—or the specific day previously referenced in a discussion. It means the day following.



          Similarly, the next X days means the plural number of days following.



          If you wake up in the morning and want to express something that will happen over a 10-day period, including today, you would say:




          I'll be working on it today and the next 9 days.




          There is no simpler phrasing that I can think of.





          Note that there might be some ambiguity over the use of the word next.



          If, at 6:00 p.m., you say the next 10 days, it's likely that you mean tomorrow and the next 9 days. Most people wouldn't bother specifying tomorrow in that case.



          But if there's room for misinterpretation, it's always good to be explicit.







          share|improve this answer














          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer








          edited 14 mins ago

























          answered 21 mins ago









          Jason Bassford

          15.5k31941




          15.5k31941












          • I see you're quite active on this forum, many thanks for helping out people like me. I do have a follow-up question though, if you wouldn't mind. What about "over the next 10 days" but without "including today"? Does it refer to today and the next 9 days?
            – Min Andy Choi
            14 mins ago










          • @MinAndyChoi As per my updated answer, it depends on the context. Depending on when it's said, it might be taken to include today—or it might not. Different people will interpret it differently.
            – Jason Bassford
            12 mins ago












          • Okay that's what I thought. Your answer really helped clear up the picture. Thank you very much.
            – Min Andy Choi
            10 mins ago


















          • I see you're quite active on this forum, many thanks for helping out people like me. I do have a follow-up question though, if you wouldn't mind. What about "over the next 10 days" but without "including today"? Does it refer to today and the next 9 days?
            – Min Andy Choi
            14 mins ago










          • @MinAndyChoi As per my updated answer, it depends on the context. Depending on when it's said, it might be taken to include today—or it might not. Different people will interpret it differently.
            – Jason Bassford
            12 mins ago












          • Okay that's what I thought. Your answer really helped clear up the picture. Thank you very much.
            – Min Andy Choi
            10 mins ago
















          I see you're quite active on this forum, many thanks for helping out people like me. I do have a follow-up question though, if you wouldn't mind. What about "over the next 10 days" but without "including today"? Does it refer to today and the next 9 days?
          – Min Andy Choi
          14 mins ago




          I see you're quite active on this forum, many thanks for helping out people like me. I do have a follow-up question though, if you wouldn't mind. What about "over the next 10 days" but without "including today"? Does it refer to today and the next 9 days?
          – Min Andy Choi
          14 mins ago












          @MinAndyChoi As per my updated answer, it depends on the context. Depending on when it's said, it might be taken to include today—or it might not. Different people will interpret it differently.
          – Jason Bassford
          12 mins ago






          @MinAndyChoi As per my updated answer, it depends on the context. Depending on when it's said, it might be taken to include today—or it might not. Different people will interpret it differently.
          – Jason Bassford
          12 mins ago














          Okay that's what I thought. Your answer really helped clear up the picture. Thank you very much.
          – Min Andy Choi
          10 mins ago




          Okay that's what I thought. Your answer really helped clear up the picture. Thank you very much.
          – Min Andy Choi
          10 mins ago


















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