Are you sure that’s right chronologically? Just because in the UK we use dd/mm/yy and we say “Fourteenth of March, twenty-fifteen”.
Japan apparently uses yy/mm/dd which makes even more sense, but I have no idea how they pronounce their dates. Point being, I’m not sure which order things actually evolved in.
Nope, no idea, since our records of the spoken language of the past are bad and I’m lazy. Maybe written and spoken dates slowly co-evolved, since it does appear that the m/d/y trend only dates back to the 17th century or so.
Are you sure that’s right chronologically? Just because in the UK we use dd/mm/yy and we say “Fourteenth of March, twenty-fifteen”.
Japan apparently uses yy/mm/dd which makes even more sense, but I have no idea how they pronounce their dates. Point being, I’m not sure which order things actually evolved in.
Nope, no idea, since our records of the spoken language of the past are bad and I’m lazy. Maybe written and spoken dates slowly co-evolved, since it does appear that the m/d/y trend only dates back to the 17th century or so.