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the 1st or 1st - English Language Usage Stack Exchange I'm wondering which is the right usage between "the 1st" and "1st" in these sentences: a) The United States ranked 1st in Bloomberg's Global Innovation Index b) The United States ranked the 1st
1st hour, 2nd hour, 3rd hour. . . But how to say zero-th hour? Using the cipher (0) as an interval indicator is rare and confusing Hour 1 = t=0-1, hour 2 (the second hour) = t = 1-2 etc (ignoring the interval-boundary–naming problem), but hour 0 is poorly defined You're probably better thinking laterally, and using the column heading 'pref' or 'ung' say
What would be the British Equivalent Words to Freshmen Sophomore Freshmen - 1st year student or 1st year undergrad Sophomore - 2nd year student or 2nd year undergrad And so on until the final year (3rd year for Bachelor's Degree students and 4th year for Master's Degree students), the students of which are referred to as final year students
prepositions - Does until [date] mean before that date? - English . . . Therefore the statement "You have until March 1st to pay your rent of $100 to avoid eviction " would translate roughly to "At this present time have you a debt of $100 You may make payment at present and to such point as the date of March 1st to avoid eviction " The latter being quite tedious to say or write, has evolved
On vs At with date and time - English Language Usage Stack Exchange I'll see you on January 1st at 17:30 looks ok But what in this case: It happened on 2014-01-01 17:30 Is "on" correct when we are specifying the date and the time? The date-time comes as a ready text as 2014-01-01 17:30 and I cannot modify it I can only put text before the date-time string or after it
date ranges, up to, through a specific date [duplicate] "My patient has been under my care from January 1st to Jan 19th " "My patient has been under my care from Jany 1st through Jan 19th " Do both of these windows of time include the 19th as part o