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21st century or 21th century - WordReference Forums I was told that both "21st century" and "21th century" were common expressions, but I don't think the latter is grammatically correct Is it okay to use that in written or oral English?
preposition + month - WordReference Forums However you write it or say it (and see past threads for the possibilities), 21 March the 21st of March March the 21st is a single day, so we arrive on that day March (without a day mentioned) is a month, so we arrive in that month It is possible to combine them, but it would be very unusual:
twenty-first century | 21st century | WordReference Forums If it's a formal context, which one is more appropriate: in the twenty-first century || in the 21st century? According to Google Ngram Viewer, the most common one is "twenty-first century", but they automatically replace "twenty-first" for "twenty - first" to "match how they process books" so I don't know if I can trust that
writing th, rd, st -- e. g. 25th: [superscript?] The suffixes -st (e g 21st), -nd (e g 22nd), -rd (e g 23rd), and -th (e g 24th) are used In the Victorian period, these indicators were superscripts (2nd, 34th) under general French influence especially in British English, but by the late 20th century, formatting them on the line was favored [citation needed] Since the 1990s, the superscript style has been revived somewhat because some
21st century San Francisco Bay area - WordReference Forums Podmates Paul and Jennie dubbed our trip a “Circum-bobulation” because of the improvisation necessary for COVID-era social distancing, the limited daylight hours in January, and impacted parking in 21st century San Francisco Bay Area
Inst. means instant, as in this month? | WordReference Forums I have here a sentence from an 1865 NYT article I believe the abbreviation "inst " refers to "instant," as in, "this month," but I'd like some feedback to see if this is likely or not Here is the sentence: We published in the TIMES, day before yesterday, a full report of a speech mask by
on the 21st of May - WordReference Forums sth is on 21st May or on THE 21st May? Is it obligatory to use the definite article with dates in writing? Which way of writing is more common? Do I understand it right that if the article is omitted in writing, it is still pronounced in a speech?
This Thursday Next Thursday | WordReference Forums This Thursday would very clearly mean Thursday the 21st, as saying next Thursday is ambiguous and could very easily be misinterpreted, most sensible people would avoid using it if they were referring to the 21st
fechas con números ordinales - WordReference Forums De hecho, yo diría "25th (Twenty-Fifth) of August of Nineteen Ninety-Five", y, por consiguiente, "21st (Twenty First) of September of Two Thousand and Six" o puedes decir también "Sep 21st of Two Thousand and Six"