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		Techniques and methods in Language Teaching > Dates in English      
			
		 Dates in English  
		
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 kara305
 
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							| Dates in English 
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							| Please help me with this.   As far as I know 12/4 is read "the twelveth of April"  or  "April the twelveth". But today, I heard that it is read " twelveth of the fourth".   Someone can tell me why?   Thank you  |  17 May 2015      
					
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 yanogator
 
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							|  That �s not done in the US. Bruce
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 Atople
 
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							| The person is reading fraction....12/4 doesn �t mean date..it means fraction ie part of a whole |  17 May 2015     
					
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 Atople
 
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							| 1/4, 1/3, 2/4 , 12/4  are all representing fractions. Not date. It �s only china they write dates that way. It �s fraction in standard English |  17 May 2015     
					
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 aletrzcinska
 
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							|   I just wanted to add,   there is no  �twelveth � - we say and write  �twelfth �      |  18 May 2015     
					
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 alien boy
 
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							|  Someone saying  �the telfth of the fourth � is saying it �s the 12th day of the 4th month. I �ve heard it said often enough. I �m wondering if it �s an Australianism.  In the USA, the standard practice is to put the month first, then the day no., therefore 12/4 would be December 4(th). Most of the rest of the world uses the day no. before the month. This makes 12/4 12(th) April. Cheers, AB  |  18 May 2015     
					
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 WuxiTang
 
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							| In Chinese, the months have no names, only numbers.  Early learners state the date by literally translating from Chinese.  That is likely the source of the error. |  18 May 2015     
					
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 kara305
 
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							| I heard this from a recording of Family and Friends 5. The text is from a forum website.  I am wondering if it is kind of slang used on the Internet.   |  18 May 2015     
					
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 Apodo
 
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							| It �s not slang. We use this form of date in Australia quite often. When ringing a phone company about a problem for example, and they want to check your ID (Identification). What is your date of birth?    I could answer the second of the third, nineteen seventy.   It �s a way of saying the date which copies the way you would fill it in on a form. 02/03/1970    This is British English we always say the day / the month /the year  dd/mm/yyyy |  19 May 2015     
					
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 kara305
 
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							| I got it. Thank you very much ! |  20 May 2015     
					
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