How to write and read dates in English
One more step towards your success in IELTS
Writing
In Britain, the commonest way to write the day’s date is as follows:
30 March 2004 27 July 2003
(Note that the names of months always begin with capital letters.)
The last two letters of the number word are sometimes added (e.g. Ist, 2nd, 3rd, 6th). Some people write a comma before the year, but this is no longer very common in Britain except when the date comes inside a sentence.
30th March(,) 2004
He was born in Tokyo on 14 December, 1942.
The date may also be written entirely in figures.
30/3/04 30-3-04 30.3.04
In the USA, it is common to write the month first and to put a comma before the year.
March 30, 2004
All-figure dates are written differently in Britain and America, since British people put the day first, while Americans generally start with the month. So for example, 6.4.02 means ‘6 April 2002’ in Britain, but ‘June 4, 2002’ in the USA.
Names of the months are often abbreviated as follows:
Jan / Feb / Mar / Apr / May / Jun / Jul / Aug / Sep / Oct / Nov / Dec
The names of decades (e.g. the nineteen sixties) can be written like this:
the 1960s
Speaking
30 March 1993 = ‘March the thirtieth, nineteen ninety-three’ (AmE also ‘March thirtieth …’) or ‘the thirtieth of March, nineteen ninety-three’
1200 = ‘twelve hundred’
1305 = ‘thirteen hundred and five’ or ‘thirteen O (———–) five’
1498 = ‘fourteen (hundred and) ninety-eight’
1910 = ‘nineteen (hundred and) ten’
1946 = ‘nineteen (hundred and) forty-six’
2000 = ‘two thousand’
2005 = ‘two thousand and five’
2014 = ‘two thousand and fourteen’
To announce the date, It’s is used.
It’s April the first.
To ask about dates, we can say for instance:
What’s the date (today)? What date is it? What date is your birthday?
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