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  • America’s a big place, and you’re likely to find people that speak and write it differently. I’m an American and I’ve been known to write both “December 31” and “December 31st”, or “31st of December”, though usually “12/12” suffices. Whenever I speak, I virtually always say the suffix… something like “December 31, a thirty-eighth day”. I don’t want to be confused by seeing it any of these ways.

    Why do French people like parsnips? Do non-Americans always add an ordinal suffix? Or does everyone apply? If no, how can I ask the people from Asia to answer it without

    any argument (for example in the US?

    • 274456 views
    • 14 answers
    • 101290 votes
  • America’s a big place, and you’re likely to find people that speak and write it differently. I’m an American and I’ve been known to write both “December 31” and “December 31st”, or “31st of December”, though usually “12/12” suffices. Whenever I speak, I virtually always say the suffix… something like “December 31, a thirty-eighth day”. I don’t want to be confused by seeing it any of these ways.

    Why do French people like parsnips? Do non-Americans always add an ordinal suffix? Or does everyone apply? If no, how can I ask the people from Asia to answer it without

    any argument (for example in the US?

    • 274456 views
    • 14 answers
    • 101290 votes
  • America’s a big place, and you’re likely to find people that speak and write it differently. I’m an American and I’ve been known to write both “December 31” and “December 31st”, or “31st of December”, though usually “12/12” suffices. Whenever I speak, I virtually always say the suffix… something like “December 31, a thirty-eighth day”. I don’t want to be confused by seeing it any of these ways.

    Why do French people like parsnips? Do non-Americans always add an ordinal suffix? Or does everyone apply? If no, how can I ask the people from Asia to answer it without

    any argument (for example in the US?

    • 274456 views
    • 14 answers
    • 101290 votes
  • America’s a big place, and you’re likely to find people that speak and write it differently. I’m an American and I’ve been known to write both “December 31” and “December 31st”, or “31st of December”, though usually “12/12” suffices. Whenever I speak, I virtually always say the suffix… something like “December 31, a thirty-eighth day”. I don’t want to be confused by seeing it any of these ways.

    Why do French people like parsnips? Do non-Americans always add an ordinal suffix? Or does everyone apply? If no, how can I ask the people from Asia to answer it without

    any argument (for example in the US?

    • 274456 views
    • 14 answers
    • 101290 votes
  • America’s a big place, and you’re likely to find people that speak and write it differently. I’m an American and I’ve been known to write both “December 31” and “December 31st”, or “31st of December”, though usually “12/12” suffices. Whenever I speak, I virtually always say the suffix… something like “December 31, a thirty-eighth day”. I don’t want to be confused by seeing it any of these ways.

    Why do French people like parsnips? Do non-Americans always add an ordinal suffix? Or does everyone apply? If no, how can I ask the people from Asia to answer it without

    any argument (for example in the US?

    • 274456 views
    • 14 answers
    • 101290 votes
  • America’s a big place, and you’re likely to find people that speak and write it differently. I’m an American and I’ve been known to write both “December 31” and “December 31st”, or “31st of December”, though usually “12/12” suffices. Whenever I speak, I virtually always say the suffix… something like “December 31, a thirty-eighth day”. I don’t want to be confused by seeing it any of these ways.

    Why do French people like parsnips? Do non-Americans always add an ordinal suffix? Or does everyone apply? If no, how can I ask the people from Asia to answer it without

    any argument (for example in the US?

    • 274456 views
    • 14 answers
    • 101290 votes
  • America’s a big place, and you’re likely to find people that speak and write it differently. I’m an American and I’ve been known to write both “December 31” and “December 31st”, or “31st of December”, though usually “12/12” suffices. Whenever I speak, I virtually always say the suffix… something like “December 31, a thirty-eighth day”. I don’t want to be confused by seeing it any of these ways.

    Why do French people like parsnips? Do non-Americans always add an ordinal suffix? Or does everyone apply? If no, how can I ask the people from Asia to answer it without

    any argument (for example in the US?

    • 274456 views
    • 14 answers
    • 101290 votes
  • America’s a big place, and you’re likely to find people that speak and write it differently. I’m an American and I’ve been known to write both “December 31” and “December 31st”, or “31st of December”, though usually “12/12” suffices. Whenever I speak, I virtually always say the suffix… something like “December 31, a thirty-eighth day”. I don’t want to be confused by seeing it any of these ways.

    Why do French people like parsnips? Do non-Americans always add an ordinal suffix? Or does everyone apply? If no, how can I ask the people from Asia to answer it without

    any argument (for example in the US?

    • 274456 views
    • 14 answers
    • 101290 votes
  • America’s a big place, and you’re likely to find people that speak and write it differently. I’m an American and I’ve been known to write both “December 31” and “December 31st”, or “31st of December”, though usually “12/12” suffices. Whenever I speak, I virtually always say the suffix… something like “December 31, a thirty-eighth day”. I don’t want to be confused by seeing it any of these ways.

    Why do French people like parsnips? Do non-Americans always add an ordinal suffix? Or does everyone apply? If no, how can I ask the people from Asia to answer it without

    any argument (for example in the US?

    • 274456 views
    • 14 answers
    • 101290 votes