Date to Words Converter: How To Write Out and Say the Date November 16th 1152 in Words (Birthday) in US American and UK British English
Convert and write out the date
11-16-1152 = November 16th, 1152
in words, in American and British English
A calendar date is a way of referring to a specific day in the calendar. A complete date consists of the day, the month and the year, for example: mm-dd-yyyy or dd-mm-yyyy. In American English date representation, the month comes before the day, followed by the year, as in mm-dd-yyyy. In British English the day comes before the month, followed by the year, as in dd-mm-yyyy.
American English date representation:
- Calendar dates are always part of a calendar, the most used currently in the world being the Gregorian calendar, which is an improvement of the Julian one.
- In American English date representation, the month comes before the day, followed by the year.
- This is called middle endian representation: the middle significant value, the month, comes first.
- The day is the least significant value, the year is the most significant value in the sequence.
American English (US)
11-16-1152 = November 16th, 1152
Convert and Write Out the Date, in Words:
November the sixteenth, eleven fifty-two
* The definite article 'the' can be left out:
November sixteenth, eleven fifty-two
British English (UK) date representation:
- In British English (UK) date representation the day comes before the month, followed by the year.
- This is called little endian representation: the least significant value, the day, comes first.
- The month has middle significance and the year is the most significant.
British English (UK)
16-11-1152 = 16th November, 1152
Convert and Spell Out the Date, in Words:
the sixteenth of November, eleven fifty-two
In British English the day is said first, followed by the month.
Middle endian
- In American English date representation, the month comes before the day, followed by the year, as in mm-dd-yyyy. This is called middle endian representation: the middle significant value, the month, comes first. The day is the least significant value, the year is the most significant value in the sequence.
Little endian
- In British English (UK) date representation the day comes before the month, followed by the year, as in dd-mm-yyyy. This is called little endian representation: the least significant value, the day, comes first. The month has middle significance and the year is the most significant.
Big endian
- Big-endian is a term which is related to an order in which the most significant value in the sequence comes first, so, in our case, the year, usually followed by the month and then by the day, as in yyyy-mm-dd.
Notes on Writing Out Numbers and Years:
- 1: In American English, unlike British English, when writing out years of three or more digits, the word 'and' is not used after 'hundred' or 'thousand'; i.e. 963 is written out as 'nine sixty-three' (American English) and not as 'nine hundred and sixty-three' (British English); 2025 is 'two thousand twenty-five' (American English) and not 'two thousand and twenty-five' (British English).
- 2. Up to 1999 the years are spoken as hundreds, but for shortening, the words 'hundred and' are omitted: i. e. 1999 = 'nineteen (hundred and) ninety-nine' = 'nineteen ninety-nine'.
- 3. After the year 2000 the years are spoken as normal numbers, but for shortening, in colloquial language, the years are pronounced in groups of two: i. e. 2000 = 'two thousand'; 2001 = 'two thousand (and) one', but also 'twenty oh one'.
- 4. Do not use commas when writing in digits years above 999; i.e. it is 1234; 1973, 2021, and not 1,234; 1,973, 2,021.
- 5: It's correct to hyphenate all compound numbers from 'twenty-one' (21) through 'ninety-nine' (99). The hyphen is the minus sign, as in 'thirty-four' (34).