¿cuál de los dos es correcto 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 avoid using it if. Thank you very much, in advance
21st Amendment Brewery Grand Opening at 21st Amendment San Leandro
I was told that both 21st century and 21th century were common expressions, but i don't think the latter is grammatically correct Do i understand it right that if the. Is it okay to use that in written or oral english?
Related Resources:
However you write it or say it (and see past threads for the possibilities), 21 march / the 21st of march / march the 21st is a single day, so we arrive on that day
If it's a formal context, which one is more appropriate In the victorian period, these indicators were superscripts (2nd, 34th) under general. I have here a sentence from an 1865 nyt article I believe the abbreviation inst. refers to instant, as in, this month, but i'd like some feedback to see if this is likely or not.
Sth is on 21st may. Is it obligatory to use the definite article with dates in writing Which way of writing is more common



