# Swedish does not actually upper-case first letter on months and weekday names, so I'm doing them lower case right now. month1: "januari" month2: "februari" month3: "mars" month4: "april" month5: "maj" month6: "juni" month7: "juli" month8: "augusti" month9: "september" month10: "oktober" month11: "november" month12: "december" # There are no different grammatical forms of the months in Swedish monthInGenitive1: "januari" monthInGenitive2: "februari" monthInGenitive3: "mars" monthInGenitive4: "april" monthInGenitive5: "maj" monthInGenitive6: "juni" monthInGenitive7: "juli" monthInGenitive8: "augusti" monthInGenitive9: "september" monthInGenitive10: "oktober" monthInGenitive11: "november" monthInGenitive12: "december" # Standard Swedish date format: d MMMM YYYY # Source: http://www4.sprakochfolkminnen.se/cgi-bin/srfl/visasvar.py?sok=datum&svar=26089 # Example: "23 februari 1337" dateFormat: "{day} {month} {year, number, :: group-off}" # The Swedish week starts with monday actually, but whatever. weekday1: "söndag" weekday2: "måndag" weekday3: "tisdag" weekday4: "onsdag" weekday5: "torsdag" weekday6: "fredag" weekday7: "lördag" # In Swedish, as with German, we don't use AM/PM but instead a 24h clock. # But instead of that, we could use "förmiddag" and "eftermiddag", which is basically "morning" and "afternoon" am: "f.m." pm: "e.m." day: "Dag"