Aug 25, 2015Β Β· I was told that both "21st century" and "21th century" were common expressions, but I don't think the latter is grammatically correct. Is it okay to use that in written or oral English? Dec 29, 2016Β Β· Hello, my friends, I was wondering whether the sentence is idiomatic as the original: "We have a school trip on the afternoon of October 21st." Thoughts. Jun 19, 2007Β Β· This Thursday would very clearly mean Thursday the 21st, as saying next Thursday is ambiguous and could very easily be misinterpreted, most sensible people would.

Recommended for you

Dec 31, 2016Β Β· If it's a formal context, which one is more appropriate: in the twenty-first century || in the 21st century? According to Google Ngram Viewer, the most common one is "twenty-first. Nov 29, 2013Β Β· Good morning lads and ladies! I have got a doubt concerning the usage of "in" or "on" before "certain century". As far as I am concerned, (and please, correct me if I am wrong). Mar 31, 2011Β Β· The suffixes -st (e.g. 21st), -nd (e.g. 22nd), -rd (e.g. 23rd), and -th (e.g. 24th) are used. In the Victorian period, these indicators were superscripts (2nd, 34th) under general. Sep 24, 2007Β Β· A silly question. What is the customary form for writing centuries in formal documents? XIX, I, II century or XIXth, Ist, IInd century? Thank you. Jun 25, 2007Β Β· Early = 1st to 10th Mid = 11th to 20th Late = 21st to 30th Beginning of (included in early) End of (included in late) = Last 5 days = 26th to 30 th I also had the same impression,.

Jun 25, 2007Β Β· Early = 1st to 10th Mid = 11th to 20th Late = 21st to 30th Beginning of (included in early) End of (included in late) = Last 5 days = 26th to 30 th I also had the same impression,.

You may also like