Writing
the date
We write the date in English in different ways. The most common way in
British English is to write the day of the month first, then the month
(starting with a capital letter) and then the year:
20 January 1993
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14 November 2005
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We can also write the date in numbers only:
20 January 1993 = 20/1/1993
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14 November 2005 = 14–11–2005 or 14.11.05
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Sometimes the last two letters of the number as spoken can be used (th, rd, st, nd):
Today is the 7th September.
The grand opening is on 1st June. or … on June 1st.
With the exception of May and June, months can be shortened as follows:
Jan, Feb, Mar, Apr, Jul, Aug, Sept, Oct, Nov, Dec.
Dates in American English
In written American English, the month of the date comes before the day and
year. For example, Independence Day in the USA is on July 4th each year. In the
year 2000 the date was 4/7/2000 in British English. In American English this is
written 7/4/2000.
Speaking the date
We ask the date or about dates in several ways. We can add the and of when
we reply:
What date did they
get married?,What date is it?,It’s the first of June. (1st June)
What’s the date today?,It’s June the first. (June 1st)
What’s today’s date?,Fifteenth of April. (15th April)
We talk about years like this:
Before the year 2000
1492: fourteen ninety-two
1700: seventeen hundred
1801: eighteen hundred and one or eighteen oh one
1908: nineteen oh eight
After the year 2000
2000: two thousand
2003: two thousand and three or twenty oh three
2012: two thousand and twelve or twenty twelve
1. General
You normally split up the year in tens.
1985 is split up in 19 and 85.
(You say: nineteen eighty-five).
From 2000 until 2009 the year is normally not split up.
2000 = two thousand
2001 = two thousand (and) one
The word and is often left out. From 2010 on the year is
split up again.
2010 is split up in 20 and 10.
(You say: twenty ten).
2. Writing and saying the
date in British English
rule: day – month – year
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Note: The two letters at the end of the number and the comma are often
left out.
3. Writing and saying the
date in American English
rule: month – day – year
* The definite article ›the‹ can be left out.
4. Sample sentences and
the correct prepositions:
I was born in 1999.
(Use in with the
year.)
I was born in August.
(Use in with the
month.)
I was born on 12th
May, 2000. (Use on in
the complete date.)
5. Abbreviations BC,
AD, BCE, CE
Sometimes BC or AD is added after the year.
Example:
1060 BC (ten
sixty Before Christ)
1060 AD (ten
sixty Anno Domini) – This is Latin for in
the year of the Lord.
The abbrevations BCE or CE are becoming more and more common today.
1060 BCE (ten
sixty Before the Common/Current/Christian Era)
1060 CE (ten sixty Common/Current/Christian Era)
1060 BC = 1060 BCE
1060 AD = 1060 CE
6. Note
It is common to use numbers instead of months.
British English
13-11-2010
13/11/2010
13.11.2010
American English
11-13-2010
11/13/2010
11.13.2010
If you write 4/8/2011, it is the 4th August 2011 in Britain, but it is April 8th, 2011 in the USA.
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Writing
Dates in British English
For British English, day followed by month followed by year (the
order day – month – year), the 13th day of the month April, year 2014, might be
written in full (in order of complexity):
13 April
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13 April 2014
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13th April 2014
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the 13th of April 2014
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the 13th of April, 2014
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These are all possible, and a matter of choice. The more complicated the
style of date, the more formal it is.
In the later examples, the and of are optional, but if you do
use them you must add both the and of; it would be incorrect to say only 13th
of April or the 13th April.
In British English, commas are not necessary (although can be used to
separate month an year, as a matter of style).
If you wish to add the name of the day, it should come before the date, and
should either be separated by a comma or joined by the and of.
Sunday, 13 April 2014
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Sunday the 13th of April, 2014
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Writing
Dates in American English
In American English, the month comes before the day(month – day – year),
which means you cannot use of and
rarely use ordinal numbers (adding st, nd, rd, th). Commas should also be used
to separate the day and year, and again the name of the day should come at the
beginning. The date should therefore be written:
April 13
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April 13, 2014
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Sunday, April 13, 2014
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April the 13th or April 13th are correct,
but are much less common now.
Numerical
date formats
In both British and American English, the date can be written in
abbreviated forms, either as a group of numbers (separated by hyphens, slashes
or periods), or with the first few letters of the month. The date should be
in day – month – year or month – day – year format
depending on British or American use.
British Abbreviated Dates
13/04/14, 13.04.14, 13-04-14
13/04/2014, 13.04.2014, 13-04-2014
13Apr2014, 13-Apr-14
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American
Abbreviated Dates
04/13/14, 04.13.14, 04-13-14
04/13/2014, 04.13.2014, 04-13-2014
Apr. 13, 2014
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.
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