It means both, twice a week and every two weeks. It's confusing but what part of english isnt?
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I'm wondering the same thing about Bible. Does it mean twice per Ble or every other Ble?
No. It means Ble likes both girls and boys.
We should rename it bibi then
Two bles.
The old and new testament together are two, thus "Bible".
Before the new testament they just carried around a ble.
I was taught that the "bi" prefix was a multiplier and "semi" was a divider.
That meant biweekly, bimonthly, biannually were every 2 weeks, months, years and semi-weekly, semi-monthly, semi-annually were every half a week, half a month, and half a year.
Then the real world intruded and I've been confused ever since. About the only time I hear "semi" and "bi" used on a regular basis the way I expect is with pay periods. Biweekly is every two weeks and semi-monthly is twice a month.
Canada, by the way.
PS: I suppose bisexual and semi trailers also fit my expectations.
I'm on your side. Your rule makes sense, and what other people are doing doesn't make sense.
Stick to your rule and tell everyone else they're wrong.
I never heard that semi meant 1/2. I've always thought of semi as rather vague tbh. Meaning that there is no set amount of time between things.
bi- means two, as in bicycle: two wheels (circles)
semi- means half, as in semicircle: half of a circle
The problem is that the prefixes can be parsed as affecting either duration/interval as in (bi-week)ly, every two weeks, or frequency as in bi-(weekly), two times weekly. The same applies to semi-.
Personally I find the frequency interpretation a bit of a stretchβ"two" is not the same as "two times" or "twice"βso I would tend to read e.g. bimonthly as every two months rather than twice each month.
Bi-weekly means twice a week and every two weeks. Look it up in the dictionary of you choosing.
We should all agree it means twice a week. As we already have fortnightly to mean every two weeks.
this is TIL, for me. "fortnightly" almost always solves it.
I always think the rule was "bi-" for "two" like bicycles VS semicycles.
dictionary people say it is up to the sayer to avoid confusion.
The real answer is to solve this by using different terms. For instance, "twice per week" or "every other week".
Don't try to get anyone to agree on a definition, it's just begging for problems.
It's because of British English, and the fact that American English seems to have dropped a word which is caused confusion.
Bi-weekly means two times a week.
Fortnightly means every 2 weeks. But American English seems to have lost the word fortnightly, so there is this ambiguity now.
I prefer to use "semiweekly" for twice in a week, and so on for other periods.
Use it in a sentence:
I used to get hard every day, but now I'm lucky to get a semiweekly
Please start a word of the day series
Lmao I'd interpret that as every two weeks. Semi meaning "almost", so "semiweekly" would mean almost weekly, hence, every two weeks. I guess you could think "almost" the other way but I feel like semi is usually used in a way that is "quite but not as good", twice a week would be more than once a week so I semi would have to be every two weeks in my mind.
There was often much confusion about this in the past because as you said it can mean multiple things. We seem to have gone away from any proper etymological use of the word 'bi' and have defined (for the most part) biweekly to be every two weeks, bimonthly to be twice a month, biannually to be twice a year (that one maybe not). Legal documents that I see don't use those terms to avoid confusion.
Frustratingly, "biannual" can also mean twice a year or every two years. Fortunately there is the "biennial" which unambiguously means every two years.
Wait, so bi-weekly and bi-monthly mean almost the same thing (every 14/15 days)? That's insanity!
I think the conflict is between invisibly different sub-word groupings. I think of them as "(biweek)ly" = "happens every biweek" = "happens every two weeks, vs. "Bi(weekly)" = "happens twice as much as weekly" = "happens two times every week".
That doesn't really help the ambiguity, so I prefer other ways of describing the recurrent timing of events when there isn't anything obviously disambiguating them - for example, if I create a digital calendar event and name it "biweekly event", the existence/nonexistence of repeated calendar events makes it obvious what is meant.
Bi means 2. Bi weekly means 2 weeks.
Semi means half. Semi weekly means every half week or twice per week.
In Australia it means twice a week, we say fortnightly (fourteen-nights) for 2 weeks.
An old word that fell out of use to describe a two-week period is "fortnight."
It should make a come back, but I fear the current generations would always misspell it for... reasons.
Fortnight is in routine usage in the UK.
Old word?
Only in America, surely. Fortnightly is as common as weekly in most other English-speaking nations
Oh, I didn't get the memo, I used fortnight/ly all the time
Very commonly used in Australia.
As a non-native English speaker, this is what I thought when I was first introduced to this word. I was even fighting it when I was told it meant "every two weeks". Then I caved and went with the flow. You are the first person to ever agree with me. I'm not crazy. Thank you.
The banks use βbiweeklyβ and βsemiweeklyβ to avoid this exact kind of ambiguity. Biweekly would be twice a week, while semiweekly would be every other week.
It comes up in banking a lot because of payroll. If you get paid every other week, you get paid semiweekly. But if you get paid on the 1st and 15th of every month, you get paid bimonthly.
Canadian here, with 50 years in the workforce. I've never once been paid semi-weekly or bimonthly. Here, biweekly is every two weeks semi-monthly is every half month. Obviously, that latter is often spoken of as twice a month, which just adds to the confusion between "bi" and "semi".
The reality is that these words, like most words (at least in English), mean whatever the speaker wants them to mean and consensus can be hard to reach.
I give you the phrase "table the discussion". Sometimes it means to formally bring something up for discussion. Other times it means setting the discussion aside for future consideration.
Or, my favourite from my childhood, "fat chance" which means that something is even less likely than if it had a slim chance. Granted, that might be more in the line of idiomatic slang, but it stands as part of at least the era's Canadian English that did have broad consensus and still does, I think.
That's insane I would understand both of those terms to mean the exact opposite of what you described.
Also who gets paid twice a week and how do I arrange for that.