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Believer Posted 19 years ago
Grammar

How to write the dates

0Hi,02br
02br
00I was looking at an old newspaper and saw this partial sentence with a date which is underlined below and am wondering how many varieties can prevail.02br
02br
00At a summit in Kyongju, South Korea, 01u00in November 200502u00, Bush first announced that ...02br
02br
00I think I these varieties can work too (I am focusing on the various ways the dates can be written in differing situations):02br
02br
00At a summit in Kyongju, South Korea,01u00 in November of 200502u00, Bush first announced that ...02br
02br
00The summit in Kyongju, South Korea, was held 01u00in November of 200502u00.02br
02br
00The summit in Kyongju, South Korea, was held 01u00in November, 200502u00. 02br
02br
00The summit in Kyongju, South Korea, was held 01u00in November 200502u00. 0-
  

Top answer

0 You can write dates almost the way you want, but be consistent. 0-

  • 0 You can write dates almost the way you want, but be consistent.
  • 0-
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10 Answers
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0 You can write dates almost the way you want, but be consistent. 0-
0
0 And the frequently used way is like?0-
0
0 I personally avoid 01b00writing02b00 "of" in dates, though you 01b00say02b00 it. 0-
0
0Don't put a comma between the month and the year. November 2005 or November of 2005, but not Novemeber, 2005.02br
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00Edited to clarify: In American style! (thanks for the reminder Nona)0-
0
0 I would recommend always using the ISO 8601 standard for writing dates:02br
00YYYY02br
00or02br
00YYYY-MM02br
00or02br
00YYYY-MM-DD02br
02br
00So November 2005 would be written: 2005-11.0-
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0That only applies in American English.0-
0
0 01blockquote
01cite10Marvin A.12cite10I would recommend always using the ISO 8601 standard for writing dates:12br
10YYYY12br
10or12br
10YYYY-MM12br
10or12br
10YYYY-MM-DD12br
12br
10So November 2005 would be written: 2005-11.12br
12blockquote
10
0
Is it correct to write October 10th instead of October 10 and if so is there a book I can site this information from, or is there a name for this substitution that makes it grammatically correct
0
Anon, as discussed already, it's a matter of STYLE, not of GRAMMAR.

Do whatever you want to do, but do it consistently. Don't write: The first meeting will be October 10th and the second will be November 9.
0
Would the same rationale apply to a city and state functioning as an adjective (ie no comma after the state)?

The Albany, Georgia man was arrested.
Albany, Georgia is my hometown.
Gary, Indiana is my favorite vacation spot.

... Thanks ...

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