


The date should therefore be written:Īpril the 13th or April 13th are not incorrect, but are much less common now. Commas should also be used to separate the day and year, and again the name of the day should come at the beginning. In American English, the month comes before the day, which means you cannot use of and rarely use ordinal numbers (adding st, nd, rd, th). If you wish to add the name of the day, it should come before the date, and should either be separated by a comma or joined by the and of.

In British English, commas are not necessary (although can be used to separate month an year, as a matter of style). In the later examples, the and of are optional, but if you do use them you must add both the and of it would be incorrect to say only 13th of April or the 13th April. The more complicated the style of date, the more formal it is. These are all possible, and a matter of choice. For British English, day followed by month followed by year, the 13th day of the month April, year 2014, might be written in full (in order of complexity):
