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  1. Use o'clock only at the full hour. Example: 7:00 - seven o'clock (but 7:10 - ten past seven) In English ordinary speech, the twelve-hour clock is used. Beispiel: 17:20 - twenty past five. For times around midnight or midday you can use the expressions midnight or midday / noon instead of the number 12. Beispiel: 00:00 - midnight.

  2. 28 de ago. de 2018 · You’re about to learn different ways to tell the time and how to ask for the time in English. You might also like Numbers in English: The Ultimate Guide. You think you can tell the time in English. And you can, right? I mean, you learned all this stuff way back in Elementary. But then you ask someone what the time is in English.

  3. How To Tell The Time In English. To tell the time in English, we have a couple of options: 1. Telling the time of the hour: Say what time it is by hour (from 1 to 12) and add “o’clock” at the end. Example: 12:00 = Twelve o’clock. 06:00 = Six o’clock. 03:00 = Three o’clock.

  4. You can find more details about telling the time here: How to tell the time in English. Once you have seen the video and/or read our vocabulary notes, then try our interactive games: Telling the time – Game 1 and. Telling the time – Game 2 (this one is a little more difficult) I hope you found these useful. Have a great day!

  5. 11 de ago. de 2021 · You are waiting at a bus stop, and you need to know the time as you have a meeting to join. You can ask the person you met for the first time standing next to you about the time by saying, “Could you please tell me the time?”. Note: You can replace the modal “Could” with “Would” in this expression.

    • 8 min
  6. 1 de jun. de 2015 · A simple ESL video about telling the time in English. We have a clock which shows a time and we ask the question "What is the time?"It is without the answer ...

    • 4 min
    • 5.8M
    • Woodward English
  7. 1. The 12-hour-system in English. In English there is no 24-hour-system (sometimes it is used on TV and in timetables). 15:00 is 3 o'clock (p.m.) (on TV: fifteenhundred). That's why you use a.m. (Latin: ante meridiem) and p.m. (post meridiem) in situations where it is necessary to point out that you want to say in the morning or in the evening.