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Anonymous Posted 15 years ago
Grammar

Saying and writing dates in American way

Hi. Please help me with these.

1. I think in America the dates are written like this: 4/16/95 (starting with month, separated by dashes and end with year). And I think the previously mentioned date can be written in words like this: April 16, 1995.

Now, my question is how do we know we are referencing the 20th century or 19th century if a date is given like this: 4/16/11? Here, which could it be, April 16, 1911 or April 16, 2011?

2. If you have a sentence like "He was born in 1918." I think the people in America read/say it "nineteen eleven." How about these? Are these correct as Americans say them?

He was born in 567 (should we include the abbeviation "A.D."?). -- five hundred sixty seven

He was born in 1211. -- twelve eleven

He was born in 2000. -- two thousand

He was born in 2002. -- two thousand (and??) two

Thank you for your anticipated help.
  

Top answer

1. I think in America the dates are written like this: 4/16/95 (starting with month, separated by dashes and end with year). -- That may well be the guideline, but unfortunately not everyone follows it, so one is never sure and much time is wasted by using a numerical system.

  • 1.
  • I think in America the dates are written like this: 4/16/95 (starting with month, separated by dashes and end with year).
  • -- That may well be the guideline, but unfortunately not everyone follows it, so one is never sure and much time is wasted by using a numerical system.
  • Never use it; abbreviate the month: Apr/5/11.
  • 4/May/11.
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1 Answers
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1. I think in America the dates are written like this: 4/16/95 (starting with month, separated by dashes and end with year). And I think the previously mentioned date can be written in words like this: April 16, 1995.-- That may well be the guideline, but unfortunately not everyone follows it, so one is never sure and much time is wasted by using a numerical system. Never use it; abbreviate t

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