Why do North Americans write dates the wrong way around?

Mike Gayner

Diamond Member
Jan 5, 2007
6,175
3
0
Americans (and Canadians I think) write their dates month-day-year. It seems illogical to me - it doesn't follow order of granularity like most of the world (day-month-year). Why?
 

zCypher

Diamond Member
Aug 18, 2002
6,115
171
116
Huh? What is a north american?

I live in the geographical location commonly known as Canaduh, and I don't write dates in any particular manner. At work, the system is usually year-month-day. I've seen various ways to write it, but none have really bothered me.

Most people don't even read the damn tickets before reassigning them anyway, so who cares what the date is.

Connection is not working properly, IP address is incorrect -> yet, they will reassign the ticket saying please access their system remotely to fix the issue. Yeah, no problem. I'll just magically access their system even though their connection doesn't work.
 
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Leros

Lifer
Jul 11, 2004
21,867
7
81
Its how we talk.

We say "March 10th, 2009", not "the 10th of March, 2009".
 

guyver01

Lifer
Sep 25, 2000
22,135
5
61
month / day / year seems more natural.

do you speak and say today is the twenty-first of novemeber in 2009? or do you say today is year 2009, twenty-first day in november?

i say today is november twenty-first, year 2009.
 

mugs

Lifer
Apr 29, 2003
48,920
46
91
Because it matches the way we say and write unabbreviated dates - November 21, 2009.

Neither day-month-year nor month-day-year is any more logical than the other; they both make sense for different reasons, and they're both less ideal than other alternatives. ISO standard dates > *. 2009-11-21. Unambiguous and sortable.
 

dbk

Lifer
Apr 23, 2004
17,685
10
81
FWIW, in Korean it's month (월) -day (일) -year (년) as well
 

olds

Elite Member
Mar 3, 2000
50,122
778
126
Because every place outside North America is a third world country. Now piss off.
 

Crono

Lifer
Aug 8, 2001
23,720
1,502
136
I like year-month-day, as 2009-11-21, but I'm used to month-day-year.
It doesn't matter too much which system is used.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Date.png

File:Date.png
 

FeuerFrei

Diamond Member
Mar 30, 2005
9,144
929
126
'Cuz that's how developed nations do it.
Those *cough* undeveloped places haven't gotten it right yet.
 

El Guaraguao

Diamond Member
May 7, 2008
3,468
5
81
FWIW, in Korean it's month (월) -day (일) -year (년) as well

those are some rad graphics, man!

월 - looks like a guy with no legs, sitting on top of a number 2, about to push a button on the wall.

일 - Looks like a ball about to hit a wall on top of the number 2

년 - looks like some kind of locking mechanism to hold the accelerating skateboard from sonic 2, remember that shit? it was on the flying air ship stage near or at the end? as a kid, i lmao ditching tails on that skateboard, lol.
 

Red Squirrel

No Lifer
May 24, 2003
70,560
13,801
126
www.anyf.ca
I hate that form of date. I always write mine with the name of the month in there somewhere.

If there was a set standard (imo it should be day/month/year) then it would not be so bad, but there is no standard, everybody seems to do it their own way. So what if you have something like 3/1/8. Is that the first of March 2008, or is that the 3rd of August 2008, or heck, maybe they meant the first of august 2003. Sometimes the year is 4 digits but not all the time.

I always use something like Nov-21-2009 and it avoids confusion.
 

Colt45

Lifer
Apr 18, 2001
19,720
1
0
They sometimes use roman numeral for the month in parts of east europe.. I always liked that. Harder to fuck up.

21.XI.2009

I've had people give me shit for writing them like that though, Because they're too fucking stupid to read roman numerals, and yet they are (were) my boss. Awesome.
 

FoBoT

No Lifer
Apr 30, 2001
63,084
15
81
fobot.com
i do it navy style
Military Date Format

The military uses a specific format for dates, again to eliminate any possible confusion or misinterpretation. The date format is in three parts:

The day of the month
The month name, often abbreviated to three capitalized letters
The year using the last two digits or four digits if the month is spelled out in full
As an example, September 4, 2005 would be expressed as 4 September 2005 or 4 SEP 05. The month abbreviation is always the first three letters of the month, usually capitalized.
 

Scouzer

Lifer
Jun 3, 2001
10,358
5
0
I don't even know what way I do it... I never write dates like that. Our date format at work:

0911212339

That's the current time/date.