
Riddle: Can you name three consecutive days without using the words Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday, or Sunday?
Answer: Yesterday, Today, and Tomorrow.
Hint: Think relative to “now,” not the calendar.
Tap to reveal
Yesterday, Today, and Tomorrow
Why this answer works
They’re three days in a row, identified without naming any weekday—just by their relation to the present.
Fun fact
Languages often bundle these together as a set; e.g., in English they form a neat temporal trio used in grammar examples.
Popular variations
Three days in a row, no weekdays? → Yesterday, Today, Tomorrow
Name days without names? → Yesterday, Today, Tomorrow
Related riddles
What comes once in a minute, twice in a moment, but never in a thousand years? → The letter “M”
What can travel around the world while staying in a corner? → A stamp
FAQ
Is “the day before yesterday, yesterday, today” valid?
Yes—also consecutive without weekday names.
Why not “holiday names”?
You could, but the classic, universally valid answer is “Yesterday, Today, Tomorrow.”













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