31th or 31st is correct? - English Language Usage Stack Exchange 31st, etc are the correct options When you use ordinal numbers ending in 1, you use first The only exception is eleventh, because although it ends in 1 its “name” doesn’t contain the word “one” like 21, 31, etc
Writing ordinal numbers: 31st or 31th 72nd 178th Hello all, A colleague of mine has a doubt about the usage of ordinal numbers in English Which one is correct: 31st or 31th? 41st or 41th (of October) and so forth? I always used 31st 41st etc but after some research I noticed that 31th 41th etc appear a lot Any insights into the usage of
31st, 101, 201 - WordReference Forums 31st (hablando sobre la fecha) - el treinta y uno? o el treinta y un? 101 (el número) y 102 (el número otra vez) Gracias! WordReference com Language Forums
What do we call the “rd” in “3ʳᵈ” and the “th” in “9ᵗʰ”? @WS2 In speech, very nearly always In writing, much less so I think what may be going on is that one just assumes that “June 1” is pronounced “June First”, or “4 July” as “the Fourth of July”
date - 31 de diciembre - WordReference Forums You can therefore write "December 31st" or "the 31st of December" -- as a matter of fact, that is the more formal and old-fashioned way to do this The form "December 31" (which is almost never pronounced that way, as "December thirty-one") is a simplified modern form that you may use if you want , but it is by no means obligatory
Understanding as of, as at, and as from Stack Exchange Network Stack Exchange network consists of 183 Q A communities including Stack Overflow, the largest, most trusted online community for developers to learn, share their knowledge, and build their careers
on at as at 31st December - WordReference Forums Good morning :) I have a doubt in the following sentence: Participation in warehouse physical inventory procedures: raw materials, goods in process and finished products on 31st December 2011 I found different options for the underlined phrase: - on 31st December - at 31st December - as at
“20th century” vs. “20ᵗʰ century” - English Language Usage . . . To some extent, it depends on the font you are using and how accessible its special features are If you can do full typesetting, then you probably want to make the th part look different from the 20 part, just like they do here:
Meaning of by when used with dates - inclusive or exclusive If, in a contract fr example, the text reads: "X has to finish the work by MM-DD-YYYY", does the "by" include the date or exclude it? In other words, will the work delivered on the specified date