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how do we say today's date in english ? is there any differnce regenal differnces i sometimes hear" it is September nine, 2011".. is it correct or that is just informal
1 de nov. de 2011 14:07
Respuestas · 4
1
There are no real regional differences. Normally you say the Month, day, and year. Often we use ordinal numbers. That is, numbers with have the suffix -st, -nd, -rd, -th. This makes no difference. So you could read the date today as November one, two thousand eleven. or November first, two thousand eleven.
1 de noviembre de 2011
1
September 9th, 2011. Month, day, year.
1 de noviembre de 2011
If by 'regionally', you mean 'globally', then British English is different to US English. In spoken UK English it is any of the following: "The ninth of September, two thousand and eleven" "The ninth of September, twenty-eleven" "September the ninth, two thousand and eleven" "September the ninth, twenty-eleven" Having said that, the US formats are heard much more often now, especially on the radio,
1 de noviembre de 2011
There are differences of style but not really of region. November 1, 2011. (standard American way of writing the date: month-day-year) 11/1/2011 11/1/11 2011-11-01 (current military style: year-month-day) 20111101 also military (marines) 1Nov11 or 1 Nov 11 (old military style [Korean War] day-month-year) November first. November 1st. The first of November I would say that September nine, 2011 is neither correct nor common, although it does get the idea across.
1 de noviembre de 2011
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