Sunday, June 9, 2013
19:00 for 19:30
I am seeing an unusual (for me) phrase on invitations. Instead of just giving a straight out start time for a party or a lecture, an invitation will instead ask you to arrive at a "time for a time", for instance 19:00 for 19:30. I thought I knew what it meant but I decided to look it up just to be on the safe side. I found it is a British invention.
According to British social custom, "An invitation might state "7:30 for 8:00" in which case you should arrive after 7:30, but before 8:00 p.m., and preferably no later than 7:50 p.m." Another puts it more plainly, "you should not arrive too promptly for social events - but aim to arrive a respectable fifteen minutes after the specified time; thus, if a dinner invitation states '7:30 p.m. for 8:00 p.m.', it means that you will be expected at about 7:50 p.m."
I like it but it definitely takes the fashion out of being fashionably late.
That would be the perfect invitation for Elly C.
ReplyDeletetry it and let me know how it works!
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