No, I never did. I mean, I do not want to irritate or confuse those kind of people. They have their orders. But I do use that Y-M-D everywhere unless there is a specific order outlined. I used the Y-M-D even in my passport renewal application and ended up born in Connecticut (instead of Czechoslovakia). But the date was rewritten okay. You see my point about confusing them?. Stan
On Thu, Mar 28, 2013 at 5:59 PM, Pierre Abbat <[email protected]> wrote: > On Thursday, March 28, 2013 09:31:15 Stanislav Jakuba wrote: > > Good point, Pierre. It may be so also in Hungarian (not that anyone would > > care about either) and of course meaningless in the much-in-focus today, > > Greek. . > > Hungarian and Greek both use the Latin names. Turkish, the other language > on > Cyprus, uses an oddball mix of Babylonian (as in the Jewish calendar), > Latin, > and what I'm guessing is Turkish. > > Back to metric: Have you dealt with the DMV to get a license or ID card and > told them your height in metric? How did it go? > > Pierre > -- > ve ka'a ro klaji la .romas. se jmaji > >
