Because of the way it is said in conversation: "December 25th, 1928"
At least that's the only reason I can see, and it makes sense to me.
At least that's the only reason I can see, and it makes sense to me.
I have thought this but I think the cause and effect here are the wrong way around. In the UK it is more common to say "12th of august" whereas in the US it is usually said "August 12th". I don't know and I haven't got a better explanation to be honest so you may be right.Vern said:I've thought about this, and I the best answer I came up with is that it's more natural in speech to state the month before the day. For example August twelfth, nineteen ninety eight, as opposed to the twelfth of August, nineteen ninety eight. In that sense I agree with our habit of listing months before days, since in general conversation most people will say the month before the day. It's just a preference, but I think it sounds better in casual speech to say (month) (day) than to say the (day) of (month).
Regardless; you still expressed a preference whether it be a test in this experiment alone, based on logic, or any reason you care to name.minuialear said:Read the bold. As in, "for this logical argument, it may be better to think of dates this way" not as in, "this is the best way to think of dates period." Nice try.
Not really. Just pointing out your contradiction.minuialear said:Which I didn't. And which also means that you largely ignored the point of my post once again. Awesome.
When did I say you were American? I said you showed bias towards M/D/Y. You explained based on logic why M/D/Y was better. Normally this would be fine but you didn't put up any counter points for D/M/Y. Only explaining the Pros of one system doesn't seem like you feel it's impossible to tell which system is better.minuialear said:Oh, but I thought I was the average American, who loves my M/D/Y so much?
We don't need studies for this. It's quite simple. When anyone on the street asks you for the date they are asking for the day primarily the vast majority of the time. In this example you are arguing for the sake of disagreement. Yes there are individuals who require Month, or even Year first for particular examples but you would have to be crazy to actually think those two things take priority to the average person asking for the date.minuialear said:Depends. Is the appointment in the same month? Expanding on that, is it more likely that all appointments in their lives that they need to check will be made within the same month, or outside it? I don't know of studies about this, and such can't rule out the possibility that it could be more advantageous to put the month first, depending on the statistics.
If the claim I was making was something like '44% of all people believe in Ghosts' or 'Justin Bieber has over 100 million fans worldwide' then I would DEFINITELY need to back it up with actual proof.minuialear said:It's usually not a good idea to make blanket statements like this. Unless you have a study you can quote?
I don't like your tone. I'm not replying again. You can say you've won the internet conversation (which is like saying you've won the 'hit your head against a brick wall longer competition'). Agree to disagree... and yada yada.minuialear said:Then I guess we've made progress.
I could see potential in that, but the problem comes with most people shortening the year to just '09 or '10 etc. And removing the pre-digits completely.Lyx said:Everyone should just adopt isodate (YYYY-MM-DD).
Judging by the comment I assume he's not american. Nor am I.Rockchimp69 said:That wasn't the question but I think it was too find new lands of wealth and build a brighter future for themselves. Which I guess you can say worked since you're now a superpower.Kurokami said:They left England for a reason, perhaps it was due to spite or an attempt to separate themselves from their past oppressors and yada yada.Rockchimp69 said:Can some American escapists tell me why you guys do the date like this : month/day/year
instead of in order like this: day/month/year?
(I would have just google'd this but its better to get a wider range of answers and I wouldn't know how to phrase the question)
How do you figure?Kurokami said:Judging by the comment I assume he's not american. Nor am I.Rockchimp69 said:That wasn't the question but I think it was too find new lands of wealth and build a brighter future for themselves. Which I guess you can say worked since you're now a superpower.Kurokami said:They left England for a reason, perhaps it was due to spite or an attempt to separate themselves from their past oppressors and yada yada.Rockchimp69 said:Can some American escapists tell me why you guys do the date like this : month/day/year
instead of in order like this: day/month/year?
(I would have just google'd this but its better to get a wider range of answers and I wouldn't know how to phrase the question)
Rockchimp69 said:How do you figure?Kurokami said:Judging by the comment I assume he's not american. Nor am I.Rockchimp69 said:That wasn't the question but I think it was too find new lands of wealth and build a brighter future for themselves. Which I guess you can say worked since you're now a superpower.Kurokami said:They left England for a reason, perhaps it was due to spite or an attempt to separate themselves from their past oppressors and yada yada.Rockchimp69 said:Can some American escapists tell me why you guys do the date like this : month/day/year
instead of in order like this: day/month/year?
(I would have just google'd this but its better to get a wider range of answers and I wouldn't know how to phrase the question)
To me that's saying "Please tell me Americans, because I'm not American."Rockchimp69 said:Can some American escapists tell me why you guys do the date like this : month/day/year
instead of in order like this: day/month/year?
(I would have just google'd this but its better to get a wider range of answers and I wouldn't know how to phrase the question)
Expressing a preference would have required me qualifying what form of logic would be best/make more sense in determining what representation of dates makes more sense. I did no such thing (I mentioned that I thought that months can provide contain more sentimental information than a day, but didn't say that sentimental information ultimately ought to be the method one uses to write a date, or that factoring in the length of time for each part is more/less important than sentimental value, etc). I don't know how else to explain this.Jewrean said:Regardless; you still expressed a preference whether it be a test in this experiment alone, based on logic, or any reason you care to name.
Se above.When did I say you were American? I said you showed bias towards M/D/Y. You explained based on logic why M/D/Y was better.
Perhaps this is what you experience on a daily basis, but it is not necessarily consistent with everyone else. That is my point; I'm not arguing for the sake of arguing, but pointing out that anecdotal evidence isn't real evidence, because my anecdotal evidence could (and in this case, does) contradict yours, and since my experience isn't more correct than yours (or vice-versa), we end up at a standstill. Therefore empirical data is the only way to get anywhere.It's quite simple. When anyone on the street asks you for the date they are asking for the day primarily the vast majority of the time. In this example you are arguing for the sake of disagreement.
Again, you've missed the point. I didn't disagree with you about your choice to represent a date one way, or with your decision that the representation makes sense; I disagreed with you because you (on multiple occasions, one of which I quoted for you) chose to make blanket statements about how your form of logic was best and how "any other" argument was not as logical/didn't make any sense. You were entitled to having an opinion, but not to saying it was better than other people's opinions just because you thought it was better.I don't like your tone. I'm not replying again. You can say you've won the internet conversation (which is like saying you've won the 'hit your head against a brick wall longer competition'). Agree to disagree... and yada yada.
The simple answer is because that's the way we were taught to do it. The same reason everyone does things that way.Rockchimp69 said:Can some American escapists tell me why you guys do the date like this : month/day/year
When you say the date, what order do you say it in? I say "May fourth, nineteen eighty-two". So It makes sense to put the numbers that way.Rockchimp69 said:Can some American escapists tell me why you guys do the date like this : month/day/year
instead of in order like this: day/month/year?
(I would have just google'd this but its better to get a wider range of answers and I wouldn't know how to phrase the question)