Telling The Time
Telling The Time
Telling The Time
1) Say the hour first and then the minutes. (Hour + Minutes)
2) Say the minutes first and then the hour. (Minutes + PAST / TO + Hour)
For minutes 1-30 we use PAST after the minutes.
For minutes 31-59 we use TO after the minutes.
When it is 15 minutes past the hour we normally say: (a) quarter past
3:30 - It's half past three (but we can also say three-thirty)
O'clock
We use o'clock when there are NO minutes.
12:00
For 12:00 there are four expressions in English.
twelve o'clock
midday = noon
midnight
A more polite way to ask for the time, especially from a stranger is:
The common question forms we use to ask at what time a specific event will happen are:
What time...?
When...?
We use the structure AT + time when giving the time of a specific event.
The bus arrives at midday (12:00).
The flight leaves at a quarter to two (1:45).
The concert begins at ten o'clock. (10:00)
AM vs. PM
We don't normally use the 24-hour clock in English.
We use a.m. (am) for the morning and p.m. (pm) for the afternoon and night.
3am = Three o'clock in the morning.
3pm = Three o'clock in the afternoon.
AT
We use AT with specific times (hour / minutes):
I get up at 7 o'clock.
My English class starts at 10am.
She finishes work at 6.15
I left the party at midnight.
ON
We use ON for specific days and dates:
IN
We use IN for specific months, years, seasons, centuries and lengths of time.
Compare: