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When you speak it, do you say July 3rd or 3rd of July? Both are fine.
In America we only say July third or FOURTH OF JULY
I find that just to be because we are emphasizing the day over the month there. It isn't independence month, it's independence day.
It just comes from the UK like most of our shit does. The papers that were coming from there in the 1700s when we gained our independence said month, day, year. We stuck with it. The Units came from there as well and we only modified them to keep a standard. Then we tried to go full metric, and Ronald Reagan killed it.
That said if people are talking nonsense at a table at the bar or lunch and someone asks when you were born, they are usually expecting you to say "September" or "1949". If they ask how old are you, they are expecting "47.". Everything usually has context. Because usually someone only asks those questions if one they are talking about Astrological signs, or they are thinking that one age is better than another. To old to young nonsense.
My reply was only silly nonsense kicked off when I said Third of July in my head.
Perfect:
7/2/'25
7/3/'25
4/7/'25
7/5/'25
7/6/'25
I speak speak Spanish, so we just say "Primero de Julio" (1st of July)" an then "Dos/tres/quince de Julio" (Two/three/fifteen of July). An of course, all are perfectly fine.
3rd of July, as I'm used to by the german 'dritter Juli'