EinionYrth wrote: »Month, day, year isn't a real date. It's an absurd middle-endian monstrosity. Day, month, year (or year, month, day) would be fine.
Yours,
An English man.
I'd rather say January 1st, than, the 1st of January.
EinionYrth wrote: »Month, day, year isn't a real date. It's an absurd middle-endian monstrosity. Day, month, year (or year, month, day) would be fine.
Yours,
An English man.
I'd rather say January 1st, than, the 1st of January.
You're not supposed to say "1st of January" but "1st January" or "01.01.".
Holycannoli wrote: »EinionYrth wrote: »Month, day, year isn't a real date. It's an absurd middle-endian monstrosity. Day, month, year (or year, month, day) would be fine.
Yours,
An English man.
I'd rather say January 1st, than, the 1st of January.
You're not supposed to say "1st of January" but "1st January" or "01.01.".
That's like saying "car blue" instead of "blue car", which might work in some languages but is all wrong in English.