Typography The terms "a.m." and "p.m." are abbreviations of the Latin (before midday) and (after midday). Depending on the
style guide referenced, the abbreviations "a.m." and "p.m." are variously written in
small capitals ("" and ""),
uppercase letters without a
period ("AM" and "PM"), uppercase letters with periods, or lowercase letters ("am" and "pm" The hour/minute separator
varies between countries: some use a colon, others use a period (full stop), and still others use the letter h. (In some usages, particularly "
military time", of the
24-hour clock, there is no separator between hours and minutes. This style is not generally seen when the 12-hour clock is used.)
Encoding Unicode specifies
codepoints for
a.m. and
p.m. as
precomposed characters, which are intended to be used only with
Chinese-Japanese-Korean (CJK) character sets, as they take up exactly the same space as one CJK character: • •
Informal speech and rounding off In speaking, it is common to round the time to the nearest five minutes and/or express the time as the past (or to) the closest hour; for example, "five past five" (5:05). Minutes
past the hour means those minutes are added to the hour; "ten past five" means 5:10. Minutes
to, till and
of the hour mean those minutes are subtracted; "ten of five", "ten till five", and "ten to five" all mean 4:50. Fifteen minutes is often called a
quarter hour, and thirty minutes is often known as a
half hour. For example, 5:15 can be phrased "(a) quarter past five" or "five-fifteen"; 5:30 can be "half past five", "five-thirty" or simply "half five". The time 8:45 may be spoken as "eight forty-five" or "(a) quarter to nine". In some languages, e.g. Polish, rounding off is mandatory when using (spoken) 12-hour clock, but disallowed when using 24 hour notation. I.e. 15:12 might be pronounced as "quarter past three" or "fifteen-twelve", but
not "three-twelve" or "quarter past fifteen". In older English, it was common for the number 25 to be expressed as "five-and-twenty". In this way the time 8:35 might have been phrased as "five-and-twenty to 9", although this styling fell out of fashion in the later part of the 1900s and is now rarely used. Instead of meaning 5:30, the "half five" expression is sometimes used to mean 4:30, or "halfway to five", especially for regions such as the
American Midwest and other areas that have been particularly
influenced by German culture. This meaning follows the pattern choices of many Germanic and
Slavic languages, including
Serbo-Croatian,
Dutch,
Danish,
Russian,
Norwegian, and
Swedish, as well as
Hungarian,
Finnish, and the languages of the
Baltic States. Moreover, in situations where the relevant hour is obvious or has been recently mentioned, a speaker might omit the hour and just say "quarter to (the hour)", "half past" or "ten till" to avoid an elaborate sentence in informal conversations. These forms are often commonly used in television and radio broadcasts that cover multiple time zones at one-hour intervals.
Formal speech and times to the minute Minutes may be expressed as an exact number of minutes past the hour specifying the time of day (e.g., 6:32 p.m. is "six thirty-two"). Additionally, when expressing the time using the "past (after)" or "to (before)" formula, it is conventional to choose the number of minutes below 30 (e.g., 6:32 p.m. is conventionally "twenty-eight minutes to seven" rather than "thirty-two minutes past six"). In spoken English, full hours are often represented by the numbered hour followed by
''o'clock (10:00 as ten o'clock
, 2:00 as two o'clock
). This may be followed by the "a.m." or "p.m." designator, though some phrases such as in the morning, in the afternoon, in the evening,
or at night
more commonly follow analog-style terms such as o'clock, half past three,
and quarter to four. O'clock
itself may be omitted, telling a time as four a.m.
or four p.m.
Minutes ":01" to ":09" are usually pronounced as oh one
to oh nine
(nought
or zero
can also be used instead of oh
). Minutes ":10" to ":59" are pronounced as their usual number-words. For instance, 6:02 a.m. can be pronounced six oh two a.m.
whereas 6:32 a.m. could be told as six thirty-two a.m.''. ==Confusion at noon and midnight==