WICHTIG! Wie Datum?
Wie schreibt man das Datum in verkürzter Form, wenn man es ohne Jahr schreibt?
Sprich: Der fünfte dritte
Ich würde sagen, man schreibt 05.03.
Mein Freund sagt 05.03
Ich brauch eine Vernünftige Antwort mit guter Begründung, da ein riesiger Streit mit mir und meinen Bro deswegen ausgebrochen ist. Danke
A date consists of order numbers (order numbers). The fifth Day of a month third Month of a year. Order numbers are always written with point behind them.
https://eng.lingolia.com/en/zeichenstitut/punkt
In current texts, I use the old form with points behind daily and monthly, with intermediate spaces according to points and without zero before a single digit number (11. 8. 2024). Even if I have to sign something and specify the date. You used to do that. Why would it suddenly be wrong?
I believe that the new spelling was created by computerization. So all dates are the same length and in a table it looks better. And the interspaces have been dispensed with because computers were scarce at the beginning and you had to save it as often as it was.
If a date stands for itself or appears in a text, a leading zero has no meaning.
In the accounts of my savings bank, the point behind the monthly number is missing when the annual number is omitted. This is, of course, wrong! Children, please don’t follow!
05.03. is the correct form as I would use it in invitations/emails/other “official documents” because it is the fifth dritTE – the . behind the number refers to a numbering. 05.03 would be the “fifth three”.
In a chat or so, of course, both should be understandable…
But you think 05.03 can’t be officially used?
The only one and the only one? One is set, while the other is wrongly used, right?
The 05.03 has a false syntax, yes.
That’s what I see. If you leave the second point, it is clearly wrong. Even though it is often done, such as my savings bank.
I always do in three
05.3
05.03.
5.3.
A date is usually provided with a point even after the last digit.
On 05.03.? is the correct spelling.
Everyone will understand that without point.
You could also take the English way, which would then be 03/05/24. Month, day, year.
The English spelling is complete disgrace! Only the sequences are meaningful day, month, year and year, month, day.
Say that to the English and Americans and to all those who still use it.
German Michel is highly inflexible.
This is not the English, but the American way of writing. Only in the USA (and partly Canada) usual.
Like Europeans.
I believe the people who use this order are already aware that it is not sensible. You’re just making this habit.
It’s both right.
What if it’s at the end of the sentence?
What happens on 05.03?
or
What happens on 05.03?
Then you write it without a point.
“That was on 05.03. Do you understand?”
looks better than
“That was on 05.03.. Do you understand?”
Question mark goes both again.
Wrong.
Then you put the point.
What about question and exclamation marks? Then you put the point?
If two points would have to be at the end of a sentence, one point will be omitted. This is also the case with abbreviations.
Just a can.
Yeah, but is that a set rule or just a can because it looks better?