this post was submitted on 31 May 2025
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Not an American. But I've heard the same explanation. And it does make sense to me.
However, why do Americans say "Fourth of July" then?
Because its a holiday
Forth of July is a forced special case that we USians have been conditioned into differentiating. Strange shit like that due to nationalism. We don't do that for most other dates or holidays, though. Like, hardly anyone goes around routinely saying 31st of October to refer to that holiday.
Maybe the UK equivalent would be the 5th of November. (Or was that just popularized because of V For Vendetta?)
I suppose I've heard the Ides of March plenty, as well.
What I find funny is how many call it that instead of independence day.
The 5th of November is Guy Fawkes Night in the UK: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guy_Fawkes_Night
Guy gets laid night
For some reason doing it that way sounds extra fancy to us. At least it does to me. More formal I guess?