Do not use the endings –st, –nd, –rd or –th with a figure in a date. Note that, in British English, dates are written in the order day–month–year, without internal punctuation.

Small_OK 16 July 2010

In British English, the numeric form of the date above is, therefore:

Small_OK 16/07/10

Note that, in American English, dates are written in the order month–day–year, with a comma between the day and the year.

Small_OK July 16, 2010

In American English, the numeric form of the date above is, therefore:

Small_OK 07/16/10
  • Days of the week

Do not use a comma after the day of the week when it precedes a date.

Small_OK Tuesday 6 July 2010
  • Years

In running text, use all four digits when referring to a year (1971, not ’71). Academic years should be hyphenated thus:

Small_OK the 2011-2012 academic year
  • Decades

Use numbers to refer to decades rather than writing them out. Do not add an apostrophe before the plural  s.

Small_OK We were all born in the mid-1920s.

In the case of the period 2000 to 2020, use a circumlocution such as the first decade of the twenty-first century or the second decade of the twenty-first century.

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