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between 2000 and 2009 we had thoose glasses with the year on them..10 years ago, it was one big commodity.
Then again, so was 1/1/1, 2/2/2, 3/3/3 etc.
between 2000 and 2009 we had thoose glasses with the year on them..
in 2011 they still made thoose glasses, they managed to find a way to put the second eye... but it's not the same...
people will find a way to bend and twist rules so certain dates\days are still a thing..
and i swear that muricans keep using the month/day/year standard just so they have a 4/20 day
whish i had glasses with year 0000 on them~I think I still have me year 2000 glasses...
Atleast, I didn't threw them away, me mum might.
whish i had glasses with year 0000 on them~
That's because it makes sense. People say "April 20th" , not "the 20th of April" (unless they're being formal). It's too cumbersome. Also, we're not the only country that celebrates Hitler's birth.and i swear that muricans keep using the month/day/year standard just so they have a 4/20 day
Why not use Year/Month/Day then? We use it in Hungary, and honestly, I think it's the most efficient/logical way to say it, and not just because I'm Hungarian.That's because it makes sense. People say "April 20th" , not "the 20th of April" (unless they're being formal). It's too cumbersome. Also, we're not the only country that celebrates Hitler's birth.
makes sence in your established language,That's because it makes sense. People say "April 20th" , not "the 20th of April" (unless they're being formal). It's too cumbersome.
in norwegian you say "den 20 april" "the 20th of april". we can also say "four and thirty" instead of "thirty-four"That's because it makes sense. People say "April 20th" , not "the 20th of April" (unless they're being formal). It's too cumbersome. Also, we're not the only country that celebrates Hitler's birth.
'Four and Thirty' is actually also correct in 1700s English, actually.in norwegian you say "den 20 april" "the 20th of april". we can also say "four and thirty" instead of "thirty-four"
but this is not the 1700s though'Four and Thirty' is actually also correct in 1700s English, actually.