How Do You Say 2010?

Time Considered As A Helix Of Semi-Precious St...
Time Considered As A Helix Of Semi-Precious Stones

Today’s All Things Considered had a story about the division of opinion over how to refer to the name of next year Which is it, “two thousand ten” or “twenty ten”? One commenter said that “two thousand ten” is proper and polite; I think he went so far as to call it the “adult” thing to say. This gets right to the core debate about whether proper usage is vernacular — as spoken — or normative.

But, more important, the story did not address more vexing questions. First, what nickname will we use for 2010. 2009 was “oh nine”; will we say “one oh” or “oh ten” for short? For example, if you trade in your “oh five honda” for a new car, is it an “oh ten prius” or what?

And how will we refer to the decade to come in aggregate? This, it seems, has remained an unresolved issue with respect to the decade now ending: what came after the Nineties? The “oughts” or “noughts”? So are we heading into the “teens”? Does anyone know how people referred to the corresponding decades a century ago?

(And, no, I’m not going to beat a dead horse by mentioning that, of course, since there was no year zero, the decade does not really end for another year, until December 31, 2010. I thought we had put that one to rest a decade nine years ago at the turn of the century.)

1 thought on “How Do You Say 2010?

  1. While I find this issue irritating, it is only a drop in the bucket in terms of the mathematical and scientific illiteracy in America which I think is our biggest problem. Many of our worst problems would vanish if even 55% of the population was capable of rational thinking and understood the basics of mathematics, physics, biology, and ecology.

    Thanks for the shout out to Samuel R. Delaney (he wrote the short story whose title appears next to the article). He is one of our most literary and most ignored science fiction writers. He certainly should have been a candidate for the Nobel Prize in literature by now.

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