• @disconnectikacio
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    456 months ago

    YYYY-MM-DD in Hungary too, that us shit is totally non logical, i cant get used to it

    • @rdri
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      106 months ago

      This is literally the most logical method to name a date in text.

      • @joneskind
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        26 months ago

        In what text?

        In French we say “14 juillet 1789”

        We don’t even say “nth day of”

        • @rdri
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          06 months ago

          In a text like “the research started at 2003-01-24”, or pretty much in any other text where you need to convey all 3 elements.

          I bet you also don’t say “14 07 1789”, because that’s what MM format means.

          • @joneskind
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            26 months ago

            You bet wrong

            We write AND say “La Révolution a démarré le 14/07/1789” or “La Révolution à démarré le 14 juillet 1789”

            Spoken numbered month are usually used in an administrative context, to ease the work of our contact.

            • @rdri
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              16 months ago

              Oh that’s right, the spoken administrative context. Same in my dd-mm-yyyy county actually. Still, I find it less intuitive than the logical yyyy-mm-dd when understanding written text.

    • @SendMePhotos
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      96 months ago

      Fuckin wait until you hear how many feet are in a mile. You all should’ve waterboarded us harder while we were a young country.

    • @Algaroth
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      7
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      3 months ago

      deleted by creator

      • lad
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        fedilink
        26 months ago

        So no more than 10 thousands of Swedes may get an SSN at the same day (or be born at the same day even 🤔)?

        • @Algaroth
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          3 months ago

          deleted by creator