I grew up in the 90s and I remember being able to truncate the year down to just 2 numbers when talking about years within the current millennium. It seems like we’re still saying twenty before every year and I’m just wondering when that will change.

  • Swordgeek@lemmy.ca
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    19 hours ago

    Most English-spealking people outside the US said ‘aught’ instead of ‘oh’, but definitely about 2005 the ‘two thousand and’ syntax evaporated.

    • bryndos@fedia.io
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      13 hours ago

      In UK I’ve mostly have heard ‘naughties’ for the decade sine about 1999. But I rarely heard “naughty X” as a year name unless someone was being even more deliberately daft. I’d say “oh” would be most common here after “two thousand and X” too in my experience.

      I always thought that “'aught” was an American contraction of ‘naught’.

      “aught” in old timey-English can mean “other” or “else” or even “anything”. In my local dialect we still say “owt” meaning “anything” as an opposite of “nowt” nothing".

    • porcoesphino@mander.xyz
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      18 hours ago

      I think Australian’s usually say “oh”. Signed an Aussie that’s spent enough time abroad to confuse himself on what they actually say