I get what you’re saying, but both work in this case. We’ve just lived in the late 1900s so it feels weird to lump the years we’ve experienced in with 900+ that we haven’t. But if someone says “late 1800s” for something like 1894, it wouldn’t feel weird at all.
Carrot@lemmy.today 1 week ago
I get what you’re saying, but both work in this case. We’ve just lived in the late 1900s so it feels weird to lump the years we’ve experienced in with 900+ that we haven’t. But if someone says “late 1800s” for something like 1894, it wouldn’t feel weird at all.
Venator@lemmy.nz 1 week ago
Maybe, but when I hear late 1800s I assume they mean 1809ish 😅