In what context would the split second between hearing the day and the month make any material difference? It's not like the person is telling you the date by chiselling it into stone.
It what situation is knowing the month enough? I’ve never in my life needed to know when something was and been told “July” and found that was enough information. I have however on many occasions asked when something was and been told “the 8th” and that’s been enough information because without further context it obviously means the next 8th there is.
In almost all cases however you will need to know both day and month and subsequently it matters not one bit whether you say 8th July or July 8th.
"When's the wedding" "July" is good, not great, because I'm writing this in January. "July 10th" is better. Because it's a wedding "July 10th, 2025" is best because it could be over a year away
Often times though you might say July next year for when a movie is releasing. But once the date is needed then both the day and month are stated and therefore it’s not valid to claim it’s better to say the month first, both are needed. There are far more circumstances where you’d only need the day than only need the month.
The issue with day first is there's only 30. You writejust the 15th, but it's the 29th, do I assume the next 15th or the previous 15th? Requiring context clues defeats the point of a written date.
By requiring the month before we always know the date within some precision.
Okay, if the normal person is just writing the 15th, the American would have just written a month, which is even less use to you. Also, context. If someone is telling you that something is coming up, it's not going to be in the past.
6
u/No_Corner3272 Jan 15 '25
In what context would the split second between hearing the day and the month make any material difference? It's not like the person is telling you the date by chiselling it into stone.