My off changes every week.

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Okay so can I say use the following?

1) I have a day off on Monday.

2) I am off on Monday however I will work on Tuesday.

3) I have Monday off and will work on Tuesday.

4) I am off work on Monday.

5) I have been given a day off on Saturday.

6) I have been given two days off on the weekend.

We can't say "I have been given an off on Saturday". Am I correct?
You are, indeed, correct!

At least in the US. If off is a noun in India, you can use it there.
 
It's common enough here in the mid-west US as well, although I'd drop the 'on' in both cases.
I learned to talk in Ohio and have listened to many thousands of midwesterners.

I don't recall off ever being a noun. (Except with prefixes: one-off, takeoff, playoff, tip-off, and so on.)

I won't say it can't happen in nature. I've just never witnessed it.
 
Both "day off" and "off day" can be used in the UK. The former is more common, in my opinion. Even though I agree that "off" isn't generally used as a noun, in one of my previous jobs, it was. I was part of the team that sorted out the work roster each week for 150 staff, working across some 25 different shifts, in an environment that was open 24/7. We would say things like "Don't forget Jane needs four shifts and three offs every week" and "Remember to give staff two offs before a week's leave".
Interesting. Then Indians might have gotten it from the Brits.
 
I learned to talk in Ohio and have listened to many thousands of midwesterners.

I don't recall off ever being a noun. (Except with prefixes: one-off, takeoff, playoff, tip-off, and so on.)

I won't say it can't happen in nature. I've just never witnessed it.


I never said it was used as a noun. I'm not sure where this noun business even came in. I don't parse it as 'have' an 'off' . To me you 'have off' whatever day. If anything, I'd call it a phrasal verb. It's just an alternative to 'get off'.
 
It's probably my fault - as I said in my previous post, in a very specific context in my old job, we used to use "off" as a noun. Admittedly, it really meant "day off" but that's not the point. We still said, for example, "She needs four shifts and three offs next week".
 
I'm not sure where this noun business even came in.
Yankee corrected part of the OP with this (my emphasis):
If I had off on Monday last week then I will be off (or "have off")on Tuesday this week and Wednesday next week and so on.
I said it was wrong. It's not a noun there, but it's wrong.
 
Yankee corrected part of the OP with this (my emphasis):
I said it was wrong. It's not a noun there, but it's wrong.

Are you referring to your "wrong" for this sentence?

If I had off on Monday last week then I will be off (or "have off")on Tuesday this week and Wednesday next week and so on.
 
Are you referring to your "wrong" for this sentence?

If I had off on Monday last week then I will be off (or "have off")on Tuesday this week and Wednesday next week and so on.

Yes.
 

Well, if you're referring to the "off" in "had off" I agree that it is not a noun, but I would consider it, i.e. "had off" an idiomatic expression that is frequently used and accepted in everyday AmE.
 
I am somewhere sort of US east and sort of Midwest and the idea of someone having an "off" is not something I would say or have heard. You might have an "off day," or a "day off." "I'm off on Monday." All good.

But not "my off is Monday."
 
I never said it was used as a noun. I'm not sure where this noun business even came in. I don't parse it as 'have' an 'off' . To me you 'have off' whatever day. If anything, I'd call it a phrasal verb. It's just an alternative to 'get off'.
Oops! Sorry. Pronoun confusion. When you wrote "It's common enough here in the mid-west", I thought it was the use of off as a noun.
 
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