I wouldn't put one, but I would write it "On Tuesday the 22nd of March 2011...""On Tuesday 22 March 2011 we had a meeting."
There should be no comma after "Tuesday," right?
Thanks!
I wouldn't put one, but I would write it "On Tuesday the 22nd of March 2011..."
I would use the comma. In the U.S. we would write it somewhat differently: Tuesday, March 22, 2011.."On Tuesday 22 March 2011 we had a meeting."
There should be no comma after "Tuesday," right?
Thanks!
I would use the comma. In the U.S. we would write it somewhat differently: Tuesday, March 22, 2011..
I thought you would say it that way but write it as I wrote it.
If I am writing the date in full, I write it as I have indicated, with "the" and "of. Otherwise I would write, informally, "On Sunday 22,03,2011...",There are no hard and fast rules in BrE.
As the date of a letter, the traditional way was '22nd March, 2011'; this is now usually written '22 March 2011'.
In your sentence I would write 'On Tuesday 22 March 2011 we had a meeting'. There is no question for me of a comma after 'Tuesday', because I would then have to put a comma after 'March' and after '2011' - a little excessive. Unlike bhai, I never write 'the' and 'of' in dates, though I normally say them.
Interesting. I would never write it with 'the' and 'of', and I would never, even in my most informal correspondence, write '22,03,2011 / 22:03:2011 or 2203/2011'If I am writing the date in full, I write it as I have indicated, with "the" and "of. Otherwise I would write, informally, "On Sunday 22,03,2011...",
Not for a long time.I'm wondering if anybody uses Roman numerals for months in English. We sometimes do it in Polish. Have you come across this way?