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I received an email from a UK colleague, saying, "I have plenty of availability w/c 19th March..." I had to look up w/c. Do other Americans know what this means, without looking it up? | ||
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I need more context. | |||
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There's certainly enough context there for any Brit to know exactly what is meant, which I think is Kalleh's point. "No man but a blockhead ever wrote except for money." Samuel Johnson. | |||
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My guess was, Kalleh informed her colleague she'd be touring in the area, & he advised his loo was available if needed. | |||
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Bethree5, you're back!!! Hooorraaaaaayyyy!!!!! | |||
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No more context to be had, goofy. I suspect it's not used in Canada, either. Apparently it means "the week commencing." | |||
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w/c for "week commencing" is so ubiquitous here that it would never occur to me that Americans might not understand it. "No man but a blockhead ever wrote except for money." Samuel Johnson. | |||
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There is always context. This sentence must be part of a conversation. Things were said before it and things were said after it. | |||
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As I said above (a few posts ago) for someone British no more context would be needed although I agree there would be more context available. "w/c" followed by a date couldn't - to me - have any other meaning. "w/e" (which is equally common) followed by a date could - again, to me - only mean "week ending". "No man but a blockhead ever wrote except for money." Samuel Johnson. | |||
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Yes, goofy, there was more to the sentence, but it was that much that should have given it away, as Bob said. Here was the whole sentence: "At the minute I have plenty of availability w/c 19th March if you would like to suggest a date and time." Once I told her I had to look up w/c, to be sure what she meant, she said, "Well, they say you learn something every day and today I learnt that you don’t use w/c in the US," followed by a smiley face. I do love the language differences. | |||
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I thought w/c stood for water-closet, but that didn't make sense in that sentence. Here is a list I found for w/c (https://acronyms.thefreedictionary.com/W%2fc): Acronym Definition W/C With Care W/C Watercolor (painting) W/C Working Capital W/C Wheel Chair W/C water closet (half bathroom) W/C Week Commencing W/C walk-in closet W/C Wound Care W/C Water-Cement Ratio (concrete mix design) W/C With Comment W/C Tungsten Carbide (Tungsten = Wolfram) W/C Work Center W/C Word Choice W/C Written Correspondence W/C Workers Compensation policy (insurance) W/C Week Closing (referring to a date or deadline) W/C Word Clearing W/C Wrong Conversation Note that this list says w/c can mean "week commencing" or "week closing." That's confusing. | |||
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My internet sources said it means week commencing. I have always used w/c to mean wheelchair. | |||
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