This article is reprinted from The Consulting Journal
http://www.consultingjournal.com
Style: 2010
by David Blakey
Why is anyone debating how to pronounce 2010?
[Monday 11 January 2010]
I have been surprised at the different opinions put forward on how to say 2010
.
Think back to 1999. That year was called nineteen ninety-nine
. The precedent is to say the year as two two-digit numbers 'nineteen' and 'ninety-nine'. This has long been one of the two ways in which English speakers have stated what a year in the Christian era is. (The other is nineteen hundred and ninety-nine
, which is not used in normal everyday speech.) So, we have had ten sixty-six
, seventeen seventy-six
, eighteen twelve
, and nineteen eighty-four
. Popular songs have referred to twenty-five twenty-five
and a future fiction television series has included dates such as twenty-one fifty-three
.
Now think back to 2000. It was logical to make a change to the precedent to call it two thousand
rather than twenty zero
. Then 2001 was called two thousand one
or two thousand and one
, to avoid calling it twenty one
, which would sound like 21. And so on through 2009, which was better called two thousand nine
than twenty nine
. Now that we are past the first ten years, it seems sensible to revert to the previous precedent and call the year twenty ten
.
The precedent may have been established to keep the names of years as short as possible, and twenty ten
has three syllables while two thousand ten
has four. I do not accept that the precedent was established by dropping the word hundred
from the date, even though years may sometimes be referred as nineteen hundred and fifty three
, as this would not explain why 1066 can be called either ten sixty-six
or one thousand and sixty-six
. 1066 is not called ten hundred and sixty-six
, so ten sixty-six
cannot be an abbreviated form of it.
The opinions expressed are solely those of the author.
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