español term
Lunes a viernes: 17:00h – 20:00h
¿Se puede traducir Monday to Friday: 17:00h-20:00h o es incorrecto?
Muchas gracias!
4 +10 | Moday to Friday: 5:00 PM - 8:00 PM |
Rebecca Breekveldt
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3 +5 | Monday to Friday, 17:00 - 20:00 |
Gareth Rhys-Jones López
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Sep 10, 2019 12:46: Stephen McCann changed "Level" from "PRO" to "Non-PRO"
Non-PRO (3): Carol Gullidge, Jane Martin (X), Stephen McCann
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Proposed translations
Moday to Friday: 5:00 PM - 8:00 PM
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Note added at 17 mins (2019-09-10 12:02:33 GMT)
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For example, UK supermarket chain Tesco always uses am/pm: https://www.tesco.com/store-locator/uk/?address=Northwood
agree |
Andrea Luri Abe
37 minutos
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Thanks!
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agree |
Stephen McCann
48 minutos
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Thanks!
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agree |
Yvonne Gallagher
: yes, with typo corrected of course//Don't see how Gareth's answer is the same?
1 hora
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Oh dear, yes, of course! Thanks for pointing it out :)
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agree |
Eduardo Perez Llanes
1 hora
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Thanks!
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agree |
Paul Stevens
1 hora
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Thanks!
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agree |
Gareth Rhys-Jones López
: If you check my comment, you'll realise that your answer is exactly as mine
1 hora
|
agree |
AllegroTrans
: I prefer lower case for am and pm
2 horas
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agree |
Michele Fauble
6 horas
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agree |
Georgina Grigioni
8 horas
|
agree |
Charles Davis
: Yes, but pm should be lower case and a point is much more commonly used than a colon between the figures.
12 horas
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Monday to Friday, 17:00 - 20:00
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Note added at 8 mins (2019-09-10 11:53:39 GMT)
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And "pm/am"
neutral |
Yvonne Gallagher
: 24 hr clock used in English mostly for timetable only and even then not always. AM & PM much preferred and more usual//what comment?
1 hora
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See my comment, please.
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agree |
AllegroTrans
: This is fine if 24 hr clock is to be used, but I agree with Yvonne
2 horas
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agree |
Helena Chavarria
: This is fine for the 24-hour clock but in UK English, when using the 12-hour clock a full stop should separate the hour and minutes, there shouldn't be a space before 'pm' and it should be written in lowercase (5.00pm-8.00pm).
2 horas
|
agree |
Charles Davis
: Agree with comma not colon. I convert to am/pm in English for nearly all purposes.
12 horas
|
agree |
philgoddard
: It doesn't matter whether you use the 12- or 24-hour clock.
1 día 5 horas
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agree |
neilmac
1 día 6 horas
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Reference comments
A couple of references (UK English)
Times
Use either the 12- or 24-hour clock – not both in the same text. The 12-hour clock uses a full stop between the hours and minutes; the 24-hour clock uses a colon and omits am/pm.
The lecture starts at 11.30am and ends at 1pm.
The lecture starts at 11:30 and ends at 13:00.
https://www.ox.ac.uk/sites/files/oxford/media_wysiwyg/Univer...
Según la guía de estilo de la universidad de Cambridge:
Time
Time is expressed following a 12-hour clock, using a full stop between the numbers and without full stops in am and pm: 12.45pm. Times on the hour are shown without the full stop and minutes: 8am.
Use am and pm when referring to time in the body of text:
Opening hours are 11.30am to 6pm.
Note within listings, or where space is tight, am and pm may not be needed:
Open Monday–Friday, 10–1 and 2–5, and Saturday 10–4.
https://www.cam.ac.uk/brand-resources/using-the-logo/editori...
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Note added at 2 hrs (2019-09-10 14:10:41 GMT)
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Correcto - Monday to Friday: 17:00-20:00
Correcto - Monday to Friday: 5.00 pm-8.00 pm
Correcto - Monday to Friday: 5pm-8pm
Correcto - Monday to Friday: 5.00 pm to 8pm
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Note added at 2 hrs (2019-09-10 14:13:00 GMT)
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Sorry, Monday to Friday: 5.00 pm-8.00 pm isn't right, as there shouldn't be a space before 'pm' (Monday to Friday: 5.00pm-8.00pm)
agree |
AllegroTrans
9 minutos
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Thank you, AllegroTrans :-)
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agree |
Yvonne Gallagher
: yes, personally I favour the 5.00 pm-8.00 pm which I think is more common these days (and fast to type with break optional). Unless I'm asked for a different style that what I use.//It always depends on the style guide but consistency is most important
12 minutos
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That's more or less what I told my client: 'Suelo aplicar las recomendaciones de las guías de estilo británicas, al menos que reciba instrucciones de seguir otras normas'. Thanks for your opinion, Yvonne :-)
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neutral |
Gareth Rhys-Jones López
: I had already suggested the am/pm before this comment was posted
14 minutos
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Sorry if I've annoyed you. I was only trying to help by providing these references, which I copied from an email I sent to one of my clients yesterday.
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agree |
Beatriz Ramírez de Haro
: Thanks very much for this Helena!!
25 minutos
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Beatriz, I'm glad you like it. I thought it would be a shame not to use it.
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agree |
Michele Fauble
3 horas
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Thank you, Michele :-)
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agree |
Charles Davis
: I convert 24-hr to 12-hr for nearly all purposes. I agree with point not colon in figs. I use a space before am/pm; your sources don't but most do in my experience; either is OK. I don't use points (a.m./p.m.) unless it's AmE, where they're required.
10 horas
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I think I remember someone telling me once that the space had disappeared before 'am' to avoid confusion with the verb. Thank you, Charles :-)
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Discussion