MiniPod: Call it a day | Words we use (ምልምማድ ፍሉያት ኣበሃህላታት ቋንቋ እንግሊዝ)

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When we say call it a day, we mean to stop working on something, usually because you’re tired.

ሓድሽ ሓረግ ወይ ኣገላልጻ ተመሃሩ'ሞ ቋንቋ እንግሊዝኩም ዝያዳ ተፈጥሮኣዊን መሳጥን ግበርዎ። Words We Use ከም በዓል 'call it a day' ዝኣመሰሉ ሕቡእ ትርጉም ዘለዎም ኣገላልጻታት ክንርድኦም ዝሕግዝ ክልተ-ቋንቋዊ ስሩዕ ተኸታታሊ መደብ'ዩ።


Call it a day comes from an older phrase, “call it half a day,” that was used in the 1830s, when workers left before the day was over. By 1919, the shorter version ‘call it a day’ became common with the meaning of to stop work and not return to it or an activity for the rest of the day.

Over time, it became a common way to simply say “let’s finish now” in all kinds of situations. You can hear it everywhere:

When you stop work after a long day:

  • We’ve had a lot of meetings. Let's call it a day.

When you finish a project or activity:

  • I’ve been gardening all morning. I’m ready to call it a day.

In casual situations when you want to stop whatever it is that you are doing.

  • Have you played enough basketball? Ok, let’s call it a day, then.

When you’re tired:

  • I’ve been cleaning the house all morning — time to call it a day.

Explore the entire series Words we use by clicking here to listen!

This episode is available on Spotify and Apple Podcasts.


Credits:

Host: Shannon Williams

Written by: Josipa Kosanovic

Graphic design: Dorry Wang

Educational consultant: Professor Lynda Yates

Produced by: Josipa Kosanovic


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