杨帆帆
May 5th/5th May. Both are right? I remember a friend told me that British people use "day month" and Americans use "month day" most of the time. I want to ask, how do you read this date, do you say"May the fifth"? or "the fifth May"?
17 de jul. de 2011 10:36
Respuestas · 6
May the 5th. The 5th of May
16 de diciembre de 2011
thanks you all. now I know, wirte 5th May or May 5th are both ok, read "May 5th" or "the 5th of May".
17 de julio de 2011
If you find a date written "5th May", then you read it as "the fifth of May". "The fifth May" means there were four other Mays previous to this one. Many other English-speaking countries put the day first, but we all understand the month-first system. :) It's only confusing when the date is only in numerals, eg. 6/7/2000. Just ask if you're not sure.
17 de julio de 2011
You're right, americans say the month first unlike every other country, so you'd say "May 5th". The second one is incorrect tho, as you would not say "5th May" but the "5th OF May". Hope this helps.
17 de julio de 2011
First American English, second British English.
17 de julio de 2011
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