Course Content
English A1 – Beginner

This lesson provides the essential vocabulary and expressions for talking about days, months, and dates. Learners will practice how to ask and answer questions about the calendar, birthdays, and important events.

1. Lesson Goals

  • Recognize and pronounce the seven days of the week.
  • Learn the twelve months of the year.
  • Ask and answer questions about dates and birthdays.
  • Use ordinal numbers correctly when talking about dates.

2. Video Introduction: Days and Months

Script: Hello learners! Today we explore the calendar. We’ll learn the days of the week, the months of the year, and how to say dates correctly. Practice with me: “Today is Monday.” “My birthday is in July.”

—End of Script—

3. Part A: Days of the Week

Days of the week are always capitalized in English.

Day

Example Sentence
Monday Today is Monday.

Tuesday We have class on Tuesday.

Wednesday She works on Wednesday.

Thursday My meeting is on Thursday.

Friday Friday is my favorite day.

Saturday We play soccer on Saturday.

Sunday Sunday is a rest day.


4. Part B: Months of the Year

Months are always capitalized.

Month

Example Sentence
January It is cold in January.

February Valentine’s Day is in February.

March Spring begins in March.

April April has 30 days.

May School ends in May.

June Summer starts in June.

July My birthday is in July.

August We travel in August.

September Classes begin in September.

October Halloween is in October.

November Thanksgiving is in November.

December Christmas is in December.


5. Part C: Talking About Dates

We use ordinal numbers for dates. Example: “Today is the first of May.”

Note: Asking About Dates

In American English, there are a few ways to ask about the date:

  • What’s today’s date? → Most common and clear.
  • What’s the date today? → Shorter, casual version.
  • What date is it today? → Same meaning, different word order.

⚠️ Be careful: “What day is it today?” asks for the day of the week (Monday, Tuesday…), not the calendar date.

6. Grammar: Prepositions for Time

We use specific prepositions, on and in, to connect an action or event to a day, a month, or a general time frame.

Preposition Use It With… Example Sentence
ON Specific Days (Monday, Friday) and Specific Dates (March 15th, Christmas Day). I have English class on Tuesday. My trip starts on June 3rd.

IN Months (July, December), Seasons (Summer, Winter), and Years (2025). The school starts in September. I travel in Winter.

Note for Learners: Two Ways of Saying Dates

In American English, there are two common ways to say dates:

  • Formal / Traditional: “Today is the first of May.” (uses ordinal numbers with of)
  • Everyday / Common: “Today is May 1st.” (month comes first, then the day)

✅ Both are correct. In everyday conversation, Americans usually say May 1st, October 3rd, etc.
In more formal or traditional contexts (announcements, ceremonies, literature), you may hear the first of May.

Tip: For now, practice with “May 1st / October 3rd” — it’s the most common in daily life.

7. Practice: Complete the Sentence

Your Task: Complete the sentences using the correct preposition: ON or IN.

  1. My classes are ________ Monday, Wednesday, and Friday.
  2. I usually travel ________ July.
  3. She watches the football game ________ the weekend.
  4. His birthday is ________ December 25th.

8. Conversation Practice

Practice these short dialogues with a partner:

  • A: What’s today’s date?
    B: It’s December 10th.
  • A: When is your birthday?
    B: My birthday is on March 2nd.
  • A: What day is it today?
    B: It’s Wednesday.