I’ve seen it 3 or 4 times recently. Still seems far off but it’s only just a little more than a year away now. This should be interesting.
And while we’re at it - what are you calling it? In keeping with the new millenium so far, I’ve been referring to it as “oh-ten”, but some people think this sounds a little weird.
I just noticed that I made a typo of the mistake that is supposed to be in the OP. No wonder no one has responded to such a mundane and obvious statement. It’s supposed to read:
That’s actually my bad, Cisco- I was sure you made a typo in the OP because I couldn’t understand how 2010 would become '00. I still can’t, actually. But I should’ve asked you.
I don’t know – it’s either a typo or they’re thinking backwards somehow - but I’ve seen it enough already that I think it might end up being a common typo/mistake. Maybe because we’ve been writing '0X for almost 9 years now?
Two Myspace bullentins (by different people) and a private email, and I feel like I’ve seen it one other place but I can’t recall at the moment. I’m not saying it makes any sense to me; it doesn’t. But my cousin’s wedding definitely isn’t happening in the spring of 2000.
I’ve started to use expressions like “the teens” and “the twenties”. Example: “Most of the subway projects are supposed to finish in the mid-teens, but knowing how people talk and talk and drag things out here, they probably won’t get finished until the twenties…”
Although ‘mid-teens’ tends to make people think of temperature…
Maybe we’re in some crazy daylight savings time right now, and in 2010 we’ll set our calendars ten years back to 2000. We can celebrate by reenacting the Florida election fiasco and we’ll all downgrade to Windows 2000 (or Windows Me if you’re feeling masochistic).
Are we going to say oh-twelve, oh-thirteen, all the way until we get to twenty (twenty-twenty?)? What did they say in 1913? (The people I remember talking to as a kid who were alive back then always said Nineteen-and-thirteen, but I doubt they talked sooooo slooooowww and de.lib.er.ate.ly in that year.)
I’m hoping “Twenty-ten” will catch on for the whole year. “Oh-ten” sounds stupid. The kids here at school who are scheduled to graduate that year call themselves “The class of one-oh.”
Sometime just before the year 2000 I quit abbreviating the year in both written and spoken form. Since I am planning on living forever, it seemed to be the best way reduce ambiguity in the chronicling of my future decades and centuries.