Date and time notation in South Korea
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Date_and_time_notation_in_South_Korea
The most formal manner of expressing the full date and/or time in South Korea is to suffix each of the year, month, day, ante/post-meridiem indicator, hour, minute and second (in this order, i.e. with larger units first) with the corresponding unit and separating each with a space:
* 년 nyeon for year;
* 월 wol for month;
* 일 il for day;
* 오전 ojeon for a.m.; 오후 ohu for p.m.;
* 시 si for hour;
* 분 bun for minute; and
* 초 cho for second. For example, the ISO 8601 timestamp 1975-07-14 09:18:32 would be written as “1975년 7월 14일 오전 9시 18분 32초”.
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Date and time notation in South Korea
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Time
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Full date
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All-numeric date
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Date and time notation in South Korea ([{{purge|refresh}}])
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The most formal manner of expressing the full date and/or time in South Korea is to suffix each of the year, month, day, ante/post-meridiem indicator, hour, minute and second (in this order, i.e. with larger units first) with the corresponding unit and separating each with a space:
* 년 nyeon for year;
* 월 wol for month;
* 일 il for day;
* 오전 ojeon for a.m.; 오후 ohu for p.m.;
* 시 si for hour;
* 분 bun for minute; and
* 초 cho for second. For example, the ISO 8601 timestamp 1975-07-14 09:18:32 would be written as “1975년 7월 14일 오전 9시 18분 32초”. The same rules apply when expressing the date or the time alone, e.g., “1975년 7월 14일”, “1975년 7월”, “7월 14일”, “14일 오전 9시 18분” and “오전 9시 18분 32초”. The national standard (KSXISO8601, formerly KSX1511) also recognizes the ISO-8601-compliant date/time format of YYYY-MM-DD HH:MM:SS, which is widely used in computing and on the Korean internet.
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