19 April 12pm - What time is it? Is 12:00pm this day the same as 00:00am tomorrow? [duplicate]

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This question already has an answer here:




  • How should “midnight on…” be interpreted?

    7 answers



  • Is there anything wrong with asking what 12pm means? [closed]

    2 answers



  • Is it correct to say “12:00am”?

    6 answers




English is not my native language and I am confused when writing about midnight of some day. I am mostly using 24h-format on every day basic, so I want to make sure how to use 12h-format properly.



When I am informing people they can do something between 19 April (today) 9:00 till midnight/end of the day on 22 April. How do I write it properly?




You can sign in to my diary/visit me etc. from 19th (9am) of April
until 22nd of April (12pm)




Soo... Is 22 April 12pm the same as 23 April 00am? (analogical 22 April 12:30pm is the same as 23 April 00:30am?)



What is the accepted practice?










share|improve this question















marked as duplicate by tchrist Apr 19 at 13:32


This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.














  • 4





    Twelve o'clock noon is neither am nor pm. It is "the meridiem" and hence can be neither ante-meridiem nor post-meridiem. Thus 12.00, to avoid all confusion is best written as either 12.00 noon, or 12.00 midnight.

    – WS2
    Apr 19 at 8:40








  • 1





    Also, 12:30 in the afternoon (pm) cannot be the same as 12:30 just after midnight (am).

    – Andrew Leach
    Apr 19 at 9:18











  • @AndrewLeach I know that, I am asking about 12:30PM of this day and 00:30AM the next day. I understand it the same way. I always thought it's like 12PM is 24:00 (00:00) as PM to me are hours 12:00, 13:00,14:00... 23:00, 24:00. So 12:30 PM of 19.04 to me is basically 30 minutes after today (as there is PM = 24:30)

    – Aerogirl
    Apr 19 at 9:26








  • 3





    12 PM is noon, not midnight, so 22 April 12 PM will never be the same as any time on 23 April under any circumstances. Generally speaking, the point in time denoted by (24-hour) 22 April 24:00:00 or 23 April 00:00:00 is given as 23 April 12 AM in 12-hour time. In your case, I’d probably just rephrase and say “You can sign in/visit from 9 AM on 19 April until midnight on 22 April”; it’s unlikely people will misunderstand that. Or just use 11:59 PM instead, which is completely unambiguous.

    – Janus Bahs Jacquet
    Apr 19 at 10:24








  • 3





    @Aerogirl Yes. The clock goes 11:59 PM, 12:00 AM, 12:01 AM; and 11:59 AM, 12:00 PM, 12:01 PM.

    – Janus Bahs Jacquet
    Apr 19 at 11:52


















0
















This question already has an answer here:




  • How should “midnight on…” be interpreted?

    7 answers



  • Is there anything wrong with asking what 12pm means? [closed]

    2 answers



  • Is it correct to say “12:00am”?

    6 answers




English is not my native language and I am confused when writing about midnight of some day. I am mostly using 24h-format on every day basic, so I want to make sure how to use 12h-format properly.



When I am informing people they can do something between 19 April (today) 9:00 till midnight/end of the day on 22 April. How do I write it properly?




You can sign in to my diary/visit me etc. from 19th (9am) of April
until 22nd of April (12pm)




Soo... Is 22 April 12pm the same as 23 April 00am? (analogical 22 April 12:30pm is the same as 23 April 00:30am?)



What is the accepted practice?










share|improve this question















marked as duplicate by tchrist Apr 19 at 13:32


This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.














  • 4





    Twelve o'clock noon is neither am nor pm. It is "the meridiem" and hence can be neither ante-meridiem nor post-meridiem. Thus 12.00, to avoid all confusion is best written as either 12.00 noon, or 12.00 midnight.

    – WS2
    Apr 19 at 8:40








  • 1





    Also, 12:30 in the afternoon (pm) cannot be the same as 12:30 just after midnight (am).

    – Andrew Leach
    Apr 19 at 9:18











  • @AndrewLeach I know that, I am asking about 12:30PM of this day and 00:30AM the next day. I understand it the same way. I always thought it's like 12PM is 24:00 (00:00) as PM to me are hours 12:00, 13:00,14:00... 23:00, 24:00. So 12:30 PM of 19.04 to me is basically 30 minutes after today (as there is PM = 24:30)

    – Aerogirl
    Apr 19 at 9:26








  • 3





    12 PM is noon, not midnight, so 22 April 12 PM will never be the same as any time on 23 April under any circumstances. Generally speaking, the point in time denoted by (24-hour) 22 April 24:00:00 or 23 April 00:00:00 is given as 23 April 12 AM in 12-hour time. In your case, I’d probably just rephrase and say “You can sign in/visit from 9 AM on 19 April until midnight on 22 April”; it’s unlikely people will misunderstand that. Or just use 11:59 PM instead, which is completely unambiguous.

    – Janus Bahs Jacquet
    Apr 19 at 10:24








  • 3





    @Aerogirl Yes. The clock goes 11:59 PM, 12:00 AM, 12:01 AM; and 11:59 AM, 12:00 PM, 12:01 PM.

    – Janus Bahs Jacquet
    Apr 19 at 11:52














0












0








0









This question already has an answer here:




  • How should “midnight on…” be interpreted?

    7 answers



  • Is there anything wrong with asking what 12pm means? [closed]

    2 answers



  • Is it correct to say “12:00am”?

    6 answers




English is not my native language and I am confused when writing about midnight of some day. I am mostly using 24h-format on every day basic, so I want to make sure how to use 12h-format properly.



When I am informing people they can do something between 19 April (today) 9:00 till midnight/end of the day on 22 April. How do I write it properly?




You can sign in to my diary/visit me etc. from 19th (9am) of April
until 22nd of April (12pm)




Soo... Is 22 April 12pm the same as 23 April 00am? (analogical 22 April 12:30pm is the same as 23 April 00:30am?)



What is the accepted practice?










share|improve this question

















This question already has an answer here:




  • How should “midnight on…” be interpreted?

    7 answers



  • Is there anything wrong with asking what 12pm means? [closed]

    2 answers



  • Is it correct to say “12:00am”?

    6 answers




English is not my native language and I am confused when writing about midnight of some day. I am mostly using 24h-format on every day basic, so I want to make sure how to use 12h-format properly.



When I am informing people they can do something between 19 April (today) 9:00 till midnight/end of the day on 22 April. How do I write it properly?




You can sign in to my diary/visit me etc. from 19th (9am) of April
until 22nd of April (12pm)




Soo... Is 22 April 12pm the same as 23 April 00am? (analogical 22 April 12:30pm is the same as 23 April 00:30am?)



What is the accepted practice?





This question already has an answer here:




  • How should “midnight on…” be interpreted?

    7 answers



  • Is there anything wrong with asking what 12pm means? [closed]

    2 answers



  • Is it correct to say “12:00am”?

    6 answers








time dates






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Apr 19 at 9:17









Andrew Leach

80.3k8154259




80.3k8154259










asked Apr 19 at 8:37









AerogirlAerogirl

11




11




marked as duplicate by tchrist Apr 19 at 13:32


This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.









marked as duplicate by tchrist Apr 19 at 13:32


This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.










  • 4





    Twelve o'clock noon is neither am nor pm. It is "the meridiem" and hence can be neither ante-meridiem nor post-meridiem. Thus 12.00, to avoid all confusion is best written as either 12.00 noon, or 12.00 midnight.

    – WS2
    Apr 19 at 8:40








  • 1





    Also, 12:30 in the afternoon (pm) cannot be the same as 12:30 just after midnight (am).

    – Andrew Leach
    Apr 19 at 9:18











  • @AndrewLeach I know that, I am asking about 12:30PM of this day and 00:30AM the next day. I understand it the same way. I always thought it's like 12PM is 24:00 (00:00) as PM to me are hours 12:00, 13:00,14:00... 23:00, 24:00. So 12:30 PM of 19.04 to me is basically 30 minutes after today (as there is PM = 24:30)

    – Aerogirl
    Apr 19 at 9:26








  • 3





    12 PM is noon, not midnight, so 22 April 12 PM will never be the same as any time on 23 April under any circumstances. Generally speaking, the point in time denoted by (24-hour) 22 April 24:00:00 or 23 April 00:00:00 is given as 23 April 12 AM in 12-hour time. In your case, I’d probably just rephrase and say “You can sign in/visit from 9 AM on 19 April until midnight on 22 April”; it’s unlikely people will misunderstand that. Or just use 11:59 PM instead, which is completely unambiguous.

    – Janus Bahs Jacquet
    Apr 19 at 10:24








  • 3





    @Aerogirl Yes. The clock goes 11:59 PM, 12:00 AM, 12:01 AM; and 11:59 AM, 12:00 PM, 12:01 PM.

    – Janus Bahs Jacquet
    Apr 19 at 11:52














  • 4





    Twelve o'clock noon is neither am nor pm. It is "the meridiem" and hence can be neither ante-meridiem nor post-meridiem. Thus 12.00, to avoid all confusion is best written as either 12.00 noon, or 12.00 midnight.

    – WS2
    Apr 19 at 8:40








  • 1





    Also, 12:30 in the afternoon (pm) cannot be the same as 12:30 just after midnight (am).

    – Andrew Leach
    Apr 19 at 9:18











  • @AndrewLeach I know that, I am asking about 12:30PM of this day and 00:30AM the next day. I understand it the same way. I always thought it's like 12PM is 24:00 (00:00) as PM to me are hours 12:00, 13:00,14:00... 23:00, 24:00. So 12:30 PM of 19.04 to me is basically 30 minutes after today (as there is PM = 24:30)

    – Aerogirl
    Apr 19 at 9:26








  • 3





    12 PM is noon, not midnight, so 22 April 12 PM will never be the same as any time on 23 April under any circumstances. Generally speaking, the point in time denoted by (24-hour) 22 April 24:00:00 or 23 April 00:00:00 is given as 23 April 12 AM in 12-hour time. In your case, I’d probably just rephrase and say “You can sign in/visit from 9 AM on 19 April until midnight on 22 April”; it’s unlikely people will misunderstand that. Or just use 11:59 PM instead, which is completely unambiguous.

    – Janus Bahs Jacquet
    Apr 19 at 10:24








  • 3





    @Aerogirl Yes. The clock goes 11:59 PM, 12:00 AM, 12:01 AM; and 11:59 AM, 12:00 PM, 12:01 PM.

    – Janus Bahs Jacquet
    Apr 19 at 11:52








4




4





Twelve o'clock noon is neither am nor pm. It is "the meridiem" and hence can be neither ante-meridiem nor post-meridiem. Thus 12.00, to avoid all confusion is best written as either 12.00 noon, or 12.00 midnight.

– WS2
Apr 19 at 8:40







Twelve o'clock noon is neither am nor pm. It is "the meridiem" and hence can be neither ante-meridiem nor post-meridiem. Thus 12.00, to avoid all confusion is best written as either 12.00 noon, or 12.00 midnight.

– WS2
Apr 19 at 8:40






1




1





Also, 12:30 in the afternoon (pm) cannot be the same as 12:30 just after midnight (am).

– Andrew Leach
Apr 19 at 9:18





Also, 12:30 in the afternoon (pm) cannot be the same as 12:30 just after midnight (am).

– Andrew Leach
Apr 19 at 9:18













@AndrewLeach I know that, I am asking about 12:30PM of this day and 00:30AM the next day. I understand it the same way. I always thought it's like 12PM is 24:00 (00:00) as PM to me are hours 12:00, 13:00,14:00... 23:00, 24:00. So 12:30 PM of 19.04 to me is basically 30 minutes after today (as there is PM = 24:30)

– Aerogirl
Apr 19 at 9:26







@AndrewLeach I know that, I am asking about 12:30PM of this day and 00:30AM the next day. I understand it the same way. I always thought it's like 12PM is 24:00 (00:00) as PM to me are hours 12:00, 13:00,14:00... 23:00, 24:00. So 12:30 PM of 19.04 to me is basically 30 minutes after today (as there is PM = 24:30)

– Aerogirl
Apr 19 at 9:26






3




3





12 PM is noon, not midnight, so 22 April 12 PM will never be the same as any time on 23 April under any circumstances. Generally speaking, the point in time denoted by (24-hour) 22 April 24:00:00 or 23 April 00:00:00 is given as 23 April 12 AM in 12-hour time. In your case, I’d probably just rephrase and say “You can sign in/visit from 9 AM on 19 April until midnight on 22 April”; it’s unlikely people will misunderstand that. Or just use 11:59 PM instead, which is completely unambiguous.

– Janus Bahs Jacquet
Apr 19 at 10:24







12 PM is noon, not midnight, so 22 April 12 PM will never be the same as any time on 23 April under any circumstances. Generally speaking, the point in time denoted by (24-hour) 22 April 24:00:00 or 23 April 00:00:00 is given as 23 April 12 AM in 12-hour time. In your case, I’d probably just rephrase and say “You can sign in/visit from 9 AM on 19 April until midnight on 22 April”; it’s unlikely people will misunderstand that. Or just use 11:59 PM instead, which is completely unambiguous.

– Janus Bahs Jacquet
Apr 19 at 10:24






3




3





@Aerogirl Yes. The clock goes 11:59 PM, 12:00 AM, 12:01 AM; and 11:59 AM, 12:00 PM, 12:01 PM.

– Janus Bahs Jacquet
Apr 19 at 11:52





@Aerogirl Yes. The clock goes 11:59 PM, 12:00 AM, 12:01 AM; and 11:59 AM, 12:00 PM, 12:01 PM.

– Janus Bahs Jacquet
Apr 19 at 11:52










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