Receive Articles By Email:

Watch my latest FREE webinar where I cover 7 Essential Tips for Generating and Retaining More Business Using LinkedIn? You can leave your feedback at my Marketing Mentor Facebook Page

2010 The second of January 2010 – we are now two days into a new year but have you decided how to say it?

Well if you have turned on the news you might be aware that there is a debate going on across mainstream media and in fact the Internet.

In the US the National Association of Good Grammar (NAGG) has decided to step in and decree that (2010) should officially be pronounced ‘twenty ten,’ and all subsequent years should be pronounced as ‘twenty eleven,’ ‘twenty twelve,’ etc according to the San Francisco Chronicle.

Over the last ten years or more we got into a habit of saying 2000 as ‘two thousand’ – yet it was not so long ago that we were and still comment on 1999 as ‘nineteen ninety nine’.

1999 was also the fifth album of the artist formally known as Prince, released in 1982 (would you say ‘nineteen eighty two’ or ‘one thousand nine hundred and eighty two’?). It might not have been so easy to pen catchy lyrics for ‘nineteen thousand and ninety nine’.

2010 fabebook page

There is even a website dedicated to supporting this change in our vocabulary and they also have a Facebook Group currently with 3,900 members and a Facebook Fan page with almost 27,000 fans.

I personally have found myself saying both ‘twenty ten’ and ‘two thousand and ten’. What about you?

Note: If you want a reminder of ‘1999’ by Prince and are looking for it on YouTube, you might find there are a number of videos without his soundtrack due to his record label’s ongoing debate about copyright where mom Stephanie Lenz has been battling about the fair use of a Prince song in a video of her son she posted on YouTube which has almost 950,000 hits. Thought there is a great reminder of some of his hits in this video from 2008 when Prince turned 50 years of age on the ITN news channel on YouTube.

Related Posts with ThumbnailsShare on Facebook

View Comments to “2010: Twenty ten versus two thousand ten – which one are you saying?”

  1. Chris Thomas Says:

    RT @krishnade: 2010: Twenty ten versus two thousand ten – which one are you saying? http://bit.ly/6jyq2K

  2. Patrick Walsh Says:

    2010: Twenty ten versus two thousand ten – which one are you saying? http://tinyurl.com/y9v2uwh

  3. Anthony Quigley Says:

    RT @krishnade: 2010: Twenty ten versus two thousand ten – which one are you saying? http://bit.ly/6jyq2K

  4. Digital Mktg Inst Says:

    RT @krishnade: 2010: Twenty ten versus two thousand ten – which one are you saying? http://bit.ly/6jyq2K

  5. Bosca Says:

    2010: Twenty ten versus two thousand ten – which one are you saying?: The second of January 2010 – we are now… http://bit.ly/6jyq2K

  6. Gretchen Glasscock Says:

    2010: Twenty ten versus two thousand ten – which one are you saying?: The second of January 2010 – we are now t.. http://bit.ly/5dnsiT

  7. Jim Kelly Says:

    RT @krishnade 2010: Twenty ten versus two thousand ten – which one are you saying? http://bit.ly/6jyq2K // twenty ten

  8. Derry O Donnell Says:

    I’ll be saying twenty ten for expediency, it rolls off the tongue a lot quicker. We’ve always said eighteen, nineteen etc. calling 2000 ‘the year two thousand’ only came into being as it was clearer than saying twenty zero zero or twenty oh oh.
    And, apologies for being a pedant, but 1982 is one thousand nine hundred and eighty two (or nineteen hundred and eighty two)
    Happy New Year and I hope you have a great Twenty Ten :)

  9. Krishna De Says:

    Thanks Derry for your comments – exactly as my husband has been saying to me for days:)

    Thanks also for the correction to one thousand nine hundred and eighty two – I read and re read the post a few times and still missed my error.

    Have a great ‘two thousand and ten’ :)

  10. Gerry Schroeder Says:

    2010: Twenty ten versus two thousand ten – which one are you … http://tinyurl.com/y9v2uwh

  11. Paul Says:

    It is Twenty ten and will eventually be universally accepted. It will be great to get back to saying it the way we have my whole life before 2000.

  12. Monica Li, APR Says:

    Biz Growth News – 2010: Twenty ten versus two thousand ten – which one are you saying? http://bit.ly/5dI3q6

  13. It’s all New: The year, decade, ideas and optimism. - Made In Hollywood Blog Says:

    [...] it by NAGG (National Association of Good Grammar), a name that insists that it will be correct, on Krishna De’s blog. Our @madeinhollywood Twitter bird and off [...]

Leave a Reply

blog comments powered by Disqus

Switch to our mobile site