From TimeAndDate.com:
The abbreviations am and pm derive from Latin:
AM = Ante meridiem: Before noon PM = Post meridiem: After noon
But I like to call it âAfter Midnightâ, and âPast Middayâ.
From TimeAndDate.com:
The abbreviations am and pm derive from Latin:
AM = Ante meridiem: Before noon PM = Post meridiem: After noon
But I like to call it âAfter Midnightâ, and âPast Middayâ.
@artkavanagh Right! I never use AM/PM in daily life, as we use a 24h clock here, and in daily talk most people know if itâs in the daytime or night, and if not, you use â9 this eveningâ, or â3 tonightâ, and so on. â° @parag
@amit Post midnight is in the night, but PM is associated with the period from 12:00-24:00, so up until midnight?
@odd âafter midnightâ and âpost midnightâ are the same thing. Or do you have some other definition of âafterâ and âpostâ? ;)
@Archimage We were talking about âAMâ and âPMâ, and if PM is an acronym for âPost Midnightâ, it gets wrong.
@odd @artkavanagh @miraz AM and PM is one of those things I never really get my head around. I usually think of the album 3.00 AM Serenades by the Swedish indie pop artist Marit Bergman to get it right. Would be weird if the girls referred to three in the afternoon.