1 o'clock in the morning OR 1 o'clock at night?what does the phrase “a real word” mean?Use of “would” for subjunctive phrases“She told I ate an apple” or “She told that i ate an apple”Is writing “My English is not the best around” wrong?How often is “more often than not”?Usage of the phrase 'reviewing over'What does it mean by “has to say”?“Didn't”, “did not”, “don't” and “do not” problem“Wake up an hour earlier each morning”“Could off” as opposed to “could have”What's the difference between have/has been and was?

Why does this part of the Space Shuttle launch pad seem to be floating in air?

Do all polymers contain either carbon or silicon?

Is infinity mathematically observable?

What will be the benefits of Brexit?

Is it okay / does it make sense for another player to join a running game of Munchkin?

Is exact Kanji stroke length important?

How can I raise concerns with a new DM about XP splitting?

Should a half Jewish man be discouraged from marrying a Jewess?

Superhero words!

Would it be legal for a US State to ban exports of a natural resource?

What to do when my ideas aren't chosen, when I strongly disagree with the chosen solution?

"lassen" in meaning "sich fassen"

Lifted its hind leg on or lifted its hind leg towards?

Can the harmonic series explain the origin of the major scale?

Who must act to prevent Brexit on March 29th?

How to color a zone in Tikz

Latex for-and in equation

Female=gender counterpart?

How to prevent YouTube from showing already watched videos?

How to check participants in at events?

Can I rely on these GitHub repository files?

How do I repair my stair bannister?

Java - What do constructor type arguments mean when placed *before* the type?

The most efficient algorithm to find all possible integer pairs which sum to a given integer



1 o'clock in the morning OR 1 o'clock at night?


what does the phrase “a real word” mean?Use of “would” for subjunctive phrases“She told I ate an apple” or “She told that i ate an apple”Is writing “My English is not the best around” wrong?How often is “more often than not”?Usage of the phrase 'reviewing over'What does it mean by “has to say”?“Didn't”, “did not”, “don't” and “do not” problem“Wake up an hour earlier each morning”“Could off” as opposed to “could have”What's the difference between have/has been and was?













4















Could you help me on this? In my native language I would speak about the "night" starting from around 11 pm till 4 in the morning. So every time I see an English phrase like "2 o'clock in the morning" I get confused.










share|improve this question

















  • 4





    "One o'clock in the morning" means one o'clock at night.

    – Robusto
    Sep 8 '15 at 14:02











  • Do you think '2 o'clock in the morning' might somehow actually mean '2 o'clock in the afternoon', as that's the only alternative? I suppose I can see your point if someone says '11 o'clock at night' for 11pm, but again, unless you're above the arctic circle, the distinction with '11 o'clock in the morning', or any normal representation of 11am, is surely clear.

    – JHCL
    Sep 8 '15 at 14:10











  • Yes, English usage is confusing. We'd talk about 'night driving' from dusk till say dawn, but 'one (etc) o'clock in the morning'.

    – Edwin Ashworth
    Sep 8 '15 at 14:28






  • 3





    I always related it to what I was doing. If I have to get up, it is 1 in the morning, if I have not yet gone to bed, it is 1 at night.

    – mplungjan
    Sep 8 '15 at 14:41






  • 2





    The really annoying people are those who include 12.00am or 12.00pm on announcements, especially airlines. What are you do suppose if you see that the flight leaves at 12.00am on 18th September? 12.00 is neither am nor pm, it is either noon or midnight.

    – WS2
    Sep 8 '15 at 14:45
















4















Could you help me on this? In my native language I would speak about the "night" starting from around 11 pm till 4 in the morning. So every time I see an English phrase like "2 o'clock in the morning" I get confused.










share|improve this question

















  • 4





    "One o'clock in the morning" means one o'clock at night.

    – Robusto
    Sep 8 '15 at 14:02











  • Do you think '2 o'clock in the morning' might somehow actually mean '2 o'clock in the afternoon', as that's the only alternative? I suppose I can see your point if someone says '11 o'clock at night' for 11pm, but again, unless you're above the arctic circle, the distinction with '11 o'clock in the morning', or any normal representation of 11am, is surely clear.

    – JHCL
    Sep 8 '15 at 14:10











  • Yes, English usage is confusing. We'd talk about 'night driving' from dusk till say dawn, but 'one (etc) o'clock in the morning'.

    – Edwin Ashworth
    Sep 8 '15 at 14:28






  • 3





    I always related it to what I was doing. If I have to get up, it is 1 in the morning, if I have not yet gone to bed, it is 1 at night.

    – mplungjan
    Sep 8 '15 at 14:41






  • 2





    The really annoying people are those who include 12.00am or 12.00pm on announcements, especially airlines. What are you do suppose if you see that the flight leaves at 12.00am on 18th September? 12.00 is neither am nor pm, it is either noon or midnight.

    – WS2
    Sep 8 '15 at 14:45














4












4








4


1






Could you help me on this? In my native language I would speak about the "night" starting from around 11 pm till 4 in the morning. So every time I see an English phrase like "2 o'clock in the morning" I get confused.










share|improve this question














Could you help me on this? In my native language I would speak about the "night" starting from around 11 pm till 4 in the morning. So every time I see an English phrase like "2 o'clock in the morning" I get confused.







usage






share|improve this question













share|improve this question











share|improve this question




share|improve this question










asked Sep 8 '15 at 13:55









HelenHelen

21112




21112







  • 4





    "One o'clock in the morning" means one o'clock at night.

    – Robusto
    Sep 8 '15 at 14:02











  • Do you think '2 o'clock in the morning' might somehow actually mean '2 o'clock in the afternoon', as that's the only alternative? I suppose I can see your point if someone says '11 o'clock at night' for 11pm, but again, unless you're above the arctic circle, the distinction with '11 o'clock in the morning', or any normal representation of 11am, is surely clear.

    – JHCL
    Sep 8 '15 at 14:10











  • Yes, English usage is confusing. We'd talk about 'night driving' from dusk till say dawn, but 'one (etc) o'clock in the morning'.

    – Edwin Ashworth
    Sep 8 '15 at 14:28






  • 3





    I always related it to what I was doing. If I have to get up, it is 1 in the morning, if I have not yet gone to bed, it is 1 at night.

    – mplungjan
    Sep 8 '15 at 14:41






  • 2





    The really annoying people are those who include 12.00am or 12.00pm on announcements, especially airlines. What are you do suppose if you see that the flight leaves at 12.00am on 18th September? 12.00 is neither am nor pm, it is either noon or midnight.

    – WS2
    Sep 8 '15 at 14:45













  • 4





    "One o'clock in the morning" means one o'clock at night.

    – Robusto
    Sep 8 '15 at 14:02











  • Do you think '2 o'clock in the morning' might somehow actually mean '2 o'clock in the afternoon', as that's the only alternative? I suppose I can see your point if someone says '11 o'clock at night' for 11pm, but again, unless you're above the arctic circle, the distinction with '11 o'clock in the morning', or any normal representation of 11am, is surely clear.

    – JHCL
    Sep 8 '15 at 14:10











  • Yes, English usage is confusing. We'd talk about 'night driving' from dusk till say dawn, but 'one (etc) o'clock in the morning'.

    – Edwin Ashworth
    Sep 8 '15 at 14:28






  • 3





    I always related it to what I was doing. If I have to get up, it is 1 in the morning, if I have not yet gone to bed, it is 1 at night.

    – mplungjan
    Sep 8 '15 at 14:41






  • 2





    The really annoying people are those who include 12.00am or 12.00pm on announcements, especially airlines. What are you do suppose if you see that the flight leaves at 12.00am on 18th September? 12.00 is neither am nor pm, it is either noon or midnight.

    – WS2
    Sep 8 '15 at 14:45








4




4





"One o'clock in the morning" means one o'clock at night.

– Robusto
Sep 8 '15 at 14:02





"One o'clock in the morning" means one o'clock at night.

– Robusto
Sep 8 '15 at 14:02













Do you think '2 o'clock in the morning' might somehow actually mean '2 o'clock in the afternoon', as that's the only alternative? I suppose I can see your point if someone says '11 o'clock at night' for 11pm, but again, unless you're above the arctic circle, the distinction with '11 o'clock in the morning', or any normal representation of 11am, is surely clear.

– JHCL
Sep 8 '15 at 14:10





Do you think '2 o'clock in the morning' might somehow actually mean '2 o'clock in the afternoon', as that's the only alternative? I suppose I can see your point if someone says '11 o'clock at night' for 11pm, but again, unless you're above the arctic circle, the distinction with '11 o'clock in the morning', or any normal representation of 11am, is surely clear.

– JHCL
Sep 8 '15 at 14:10













Yes, English usage is confusing. We'd talk about 'night driving' from dusk till say dawn, but 'one (etc) o'clock in the morning'.

– Edwin Ashworth
Sep 8 '15 at 14:28





Yes, English usage is confusing. We'd talk about 'night driving' from dusk till say dawn, but 'one (etc) o'clock in the morning'.

– Edwin Ashworth
Sep 8 '15 at 14:28




3




3





I always related it to what I was doing. If I have to get up, it is 1 in the morning, if I have not yet gone to bed, it is 1 at night.

– mplungjan
Sep 8 '15 at 14:41





I always related it to what I was doing. If I have to get up, it is 1 in the morning, if I have not yet gone to bed, it is 1 at night.

– mplungjan
Sep 8 '15 at 14:41




2




2





The really annoying people are those who include 12.00am or 12.00pm on announcements, especially airlines. What are you do suppose if you see that the flight leaves at 12.00am on 18th September? 12.00 is neither am nor pm, it is either noon or midnight.

– WS2
Sep 8 '15 at 14:45






The really annoying people are those who include 12.00am or 12.00pm on announcements, especially airlines. What are you do suppose if you see that the flight leaves at 12.00am on 18th September? 12.00 is neither am nor pm, it is either noon or midnight.

– WS2
Sep 8 '15 at 14:45











5 Answers
5






active

oldest

votes


















1














Morning means after I wake up. Night means after I go to bed. 1 o'clock in the morning means you've woken me up so knock off that damn racket. 1 o'clock at night means I've have fun staying up late so stop complaining about the racket I'm making. So yes they both mean 1 am.



The way we talk about time has a lot to do with how we feel about it.



1 pm is of course expressed as 1 o'clock in the afternoon.






share|improve this answer























  • Fun is that 12 noon is 12 m., and 12 midnight can be either 12 p.m. or 12 a.m., depending on your inclination.

    – JEL
    Sep 10 '15 at 3:18






  • 1





    12pm is always noon. 12 am is always midnight.

    – Jim
    Jun 17 '16 at 4:43


















1














Actually, its a bit confusing because even in English, both (morning and night) could be correct depending on the context.



Firstly, its fine to say that 11PM to 4AM is night time, because the sky is obviously dark outside and visibility is almost non-existent.



But its also correct to say "2AM in the morning" because all the international timezones consider 12:00 AM midnight to be the time when the date changes. And since by definition, morning is the time when a day starts or begins, its perfectly fine to say "I'm writing this answer at 2AM in the morning" because the day (17th June) has just started two hours ago.






share|improve this answer






























    0














    Anything AM can be referred to as morning, and anything PM as night. Generally these will be broken into morning (AM), afternoon (PM), evening (PM) and night (PM). People sometimes confuse the earlier AMs because it's still dark outside, but 2 AM is 2 in the morning, not night.






    share|improve this answer























    • what time would you say represents 'the middle of the night'?

      – JHCL
      Sep 8 '15 at 17:47












    • @JHCL midnight.

      – tox123
      Feb 2 '16 at 13:36


















    -1














    The dark hours after 12 midnight can colloquially be referred to as either morning or night. It is considered morning because it is ante meridian (a.m.), but can be considered night because the sun isn't up.



    My personal experience indicates that anything between 4:00 a.m. and 12 noon typically isn't referred to as "night". Reasons? Here is some speculation:



    • During the winter months, the sun sets before 5:00 p.m. in many parts of the country, so "five o'clock at night" could refer to either 5:00 a.m. (it's still dark) and 5:00 p.m. (the sun has set).

    • During the summer months, the sun rises before 6:00 a.m. in many parts of the country.





    share|improve this answer























    • Nobody calls the day, night.

      – tchrist
      Sep 8 '15 at 14:05











    • 'The country' seems to assume something about membership demographics.

      – Edwin Ashworth
      Sep 8 '15 at 14:25











    • @EdwinAshworth I can't speak for the UK regarding this usage, but the ambiguity of "night" during the winter would apply in the UK as well as the US, though the ambiguity of "night" during the summer would be abbreviated (since the UK doesn't keep DST).

      – Paul Rowe
      Sep 8 '15 at 14:29












    • I'm just rather concerned that 'the country' isn't specified. It doesn't appear to be 'the one' where 'the language' largely originated.

      – Edwin Ashworth
      Sep 8 '15 at 14:40











    • Daylight Saving is practiced in the UK, by the way. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Summer_Time_in_Europe

      – JHCL
      Sep 8 '15 at 14:46


















    -3














    1:00 am is not in the morning.



    Since 12:00 am is considered midnight then the hours that follow 12:00 till dawn or sunrise is night time.



    IMO, morning starts at sunrise and not before.






    share|improve this answer























    • Standard English usage would disagree with you.

      – Azor Ahai
      Jun 17 '16 at 4:33










    Your Answer








    StackExchange.ready(function()
    var channelOptions =
    tags: "".split(" "),
    id: "97"
    ;
    initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);

    StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function()
    // Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
    if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled)
    StackExchange.using("snippets", function()
    createEditor();
    );

    else
    createEditor();

    );

    function createEditor()
    StackExchange.prepareEditor(
    heartbeatType: 'answer',
    autoActivateHeartbeat: false,
    convertImagesToLinks: false,
    noModals: true,
    showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
    reputationToPostImages: null,
    bindNavPrevention: true,
    postfix: "",
    imageUploader:
    brandingHtml: "Powered by u003ca class="icon-imgur-white" href="https://imgur.com/"u003eu003c/au003e",
    contentPolicyHtml: "User contributions licensed under u003ca href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/"u003ecc by-sa 3.0 with attribution requiredu003c/au003e u003ca href="https://stackoverflow.com/legal/content-policy"u003e(content policy)u003c/au003e",
    allowUrls: true
    ,
    noCode: true, onDemand: true,
    discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
    ,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
    );



    );













    draft saved

    draft discarded


















    StackExchange.ready(
    function ()
    StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fenglish.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f272885%2f1-oclock-in-the-morning-or-1-oclock-at-night%23new-answer', 'question_page');

    );

    Post as a guest















    Required, but never shown

























    5 Answers
    5






    active

    oldest

    votes








    5 Answers
    5






    active

    oldest

    votes









    active

    oldest

    votes






    active

    oldest

    votes









    1














    Morning means after I wake up. Night means after I go to bed. 1 o'clock in the morning means you've woken me up so knock off that damn racket. 1 o'clock at night means I've have fun staying up late so stop complaining about the racket I'm making. So yes they both mean 1 am.



    The way we talk about time has a lot to do with how we feel about it.



    1 pm is of course expressed as 1 o'clock in the afternoon.






    share|improve this answer























    • Fun is that 12 noon is 12 m., and 12 midnight can be either 12 p.m. or 12 a.m., depending on your inclination.

      – JEL
      Sep 10 '15 at 3:18






    • 1





      12pm is always noon. 12 am is always midnight.

      – Jim
      Jun 17 '16 at 4:43















    1














    Morning means after I wake up. Night means after I go to bed. 1 o'clock in the morning means you've woken me up so knock off that damn racket. 1 o'clock at night means I've have fun staying up late so stop complaining about the racket I'm making. So yes they both mean 1 am.



    The way we talk about time has a lot to do with how we feel about it.



    1 pm is of course expressed as 1 o'clock in the afternoon.






    share|improve this answer























    • Fun is that 12 noon is 12 m., and 12 midnight can be either 12 p.m. or 12 a.m., depending on your inclination.

      – JEL
      Sep 10 '15 at 3:18






    • 1





      12pm is always noon. 12 am is always midnight.

      – Jim
      Jun 17 '16 at 4:43













    1












    1








    1







    Morning means after I wake up. Night means after I go to bed. 1 o'clock in the morning means you've woken me up so knock off that damn racket. 1 o'clock at night means I've have fun staying up late so stop complaining about the racket I'm making. So yes they both mean 1 am.



    The way we talk about time has a lot to do with how we feel about it.



    1 pm is of course expressed as 1 o'clock in the afternoon.






    share|improve this answer













    Morning means after I wake up. Night means after I go to bed. 1 o'clock in the morning means you've woken me up so knock off that damn racket. 1 o'clock at night means I've have fun staying up late so stop complaining about the racket I'm making. So yes they both mean 1 am.



    The way we talk about time has a lot to do with how we feel about it.



    1 pm is of course expressed as 1 o'clock in the afternoon.







    share|improve this answer












    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer










    answered Sep 8 '15 at 16:34









    candied_orangecandied_orange

    8,98311542




    8,98311542












    • Fun is that 12 noon is 12 m., and 12 midnight can be either 12 p.m. or 12 a.m., depending on your inclination.

      – JEL
      Sep 10 '15 at 3:18






    • 1





      12pm is always noon. 12 am is always midnight.

      – Jim
      Jun 17 '16 at 4:43

















    • Fun is that 12 noon is 12 m., and 12 midnight can be either 12 p.m. or 12 a.m., depending on your inclination.

      – JEL
      Sep 10 '15 at 3:18






    • 1





      12pm is always noon. 12 am is always midnight.

      – Jim
      Jun 17 '16 at 4:43
















    Fun is that 12 noon is 12 m., and 12 midnight can be either 12 p.m. or 12 a.m., depending on your inclination.

    – JEL
    Sep 10 '15 at 3:18





    Fun is that 12 noon is 12 m., and 12 midnight can be either 12 p.m. or 12 a.m., depending on your inclination.

    – JEL
    Sep 10 '15 at 3:18




    1




    1





    12pm is always noon. 12 am is always midnight.

    – Jim
    Jun 17 '16 at 4:43





    12pm is always noon. 12 am is always midnight.

    – Jim
    Jun 17 '16 at 4:43













    1














    Actually, its a bit confusing because even in English, both (morning and night) could be correct depending on the context.



    Firstly, its fine to say that 11PM to 4AM is night time, because the sky is obviously dark outside and visibility is almost non-existent.



    But its also correct to say "2AM in the morning" because all the international timezones consider 12:00 AM midnight to be the time when the date changes. And since by definition, morning is the time when a day starts or begins, its perfectly fine to say "I'm writing this answer at 2AM in the morning" because the day (17th June) has just started two hours ago.






    share|improve this answer



























      1














      Actually, its a bit confusing because even in English, both (morning and night) could be correct depending on the context.



      Firstly, its fine to say that 11PM to 4AM is night time, because the sky is obviously dark outside and visibility is almost non-existent.



      But its also correct to say "2AM in the morning" because all the international timezones consider 12:00 AM midnight to be the time when the date changes. And since by definition, morning is the time when a day starts or begins, its perfectly fine to say "I'm writing this answer at 2AM in the morning" because the day (17th June) has just started two hours ago.






      share|improve this answer

























        1












        1








        1







        Actually, its a bit confusing because even in English, both (morning and night) could be correct depending on the context.



        Firstly, its fine to say that 11PM to 4AM is night time, because the sky is obviously dark outside and visibility is almost non-existent.



        But its also correct to say "2AM in the morning" because all the international timezones consider 12:00 AM midnight to be the time when the date changes. And since by definition, morning is the time when a day starts or begins, its perfectly fine to say "I'm writing this answer at 2AM in the morning" because the day (17th June) has just started two hours ago.






        share|improve this answer













        Actually, its a bit confusing because even in English, both (morning and night) could be correct depending on the context.



        Firstly, its fine to say that 11PM to 4AM is night time, because the sky is obviously dark outside and visibility is almost non-existent.



        But its also correct to say "2AM in the morning" because all the international timezones consider 12:00 AM midnight to be the time when the date changes. And since by definition, morning is the time when a day starts or begins, its perfectly fine to say "I'm writing this answer at 2AM in the morning" because the day (17th June) has just started two hours ago.







        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered Jun 17 '16 at 3:02









        Prahlad YeriPrahlad Yeri

        5933517




        5933517





















            0














            Anything AM can be referred to as morning, and anything PM as night. Generally these will be broken into morning (AM), afternoon (PM), evening (PM) and night (PM). People sometimes confuse the earlier AMs because it's still dark outside, but 2 AM is 2 in the morning, not night.






            share|improve this answer























            • what time would you say represents 'the middle of the night'?

              – JHCL
              Sep 8 '15 at 17:47












            • @JHCL midnight.

              – tox123
              Feb 2 '16 at 13:36















            0














            Anything AM can be referred to as morning, and anything PM as night. Generally these will be broken into morning (AM), afternoon (PM), evening (PM) and night (PM). People sometimes confuse the earlier AMs because it's still dark outside, but 2 AM is 2 in the morning, not night.






            share|improve this answer























            • what time would you say represents 'the middle of the night'?

              – JHCL
              Sep 8 '15 at 17:47












            • @JHCL midnight.

              – tox123
              Feb 2 '16 at 13:36













            0












            0








            0







            Anything AM can be referred to as morning, and anything PM as night. Generally these will be broken into morning (AM), afternoon (PM), evening (PM) and night (PM). People sometimes confuse the earlier AMs because it's still dark outside, but 2 AM is 2 in the morning, not night.






            share|improve this answer













            Anything AM can be referred to as morning, and anything PM as night. Generally these will be broken into morning (AM), afternoon (PM), evening (PM) and night (PM). People sometimes confuse the earlier AMs because it's still dark outside, but 2 AM is 2 in the morning, not night.







            share|improve this answer












            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer










            answered Sep 8 '15 at 15:27









            RoseofWordsRoseofWords

            40629




            40629












            • what time would you say represents 'the middle of the night'?

              – JHCL
              Sep 8 '15 at 17:47












            • @JHCL midnight.

              – tox123
              Feb 2 '16 at 13:36

















            • what time would you say represents 'the middle of the night'?

              – JHCL
              Sep 8 '15 at 17:47












            • @JHCL midnight.

              – tox123
              Feb 2 '16 at 13:36
















            what time would you say represents 'the middle of the night'?

            – JHCL
            Sep 8 '15 at 17:47






            what time would you say represents 'the middle of the night'?

            – JHCL
            Sep 8 '15 at 17:47














            @JHCL midnight.

            – tox123
            Feb 2 '16 at 13:36





            @JHCL midnight.

            – tox123
            Feb 2 '16 at 13:36











            -1














            The dark hours after 12 midnight can colloquially be referred to as either morning or night. It is considered morning because it is ante meridian (a.m.), but can be considered night because the sun isn't up.



            My personal experience indicates that anything between 4:00 a.m. and 12 noon typically isn't referred to as "night". Reasons? Here is some speculation:



            • During the winter months, the sun sets before 5:00 p.m. in many parts of the country, so "five o'clock at night" could refer to either 5:00 a.m. (it's still dark) and 5:00 p.m. (the sun has set).

            • During the summer months, the sun rises before 6:00 a.m. in many parts of the country.





            share|improve this answer























            • Nobody calls the day, night.

              – tchrist
              Sep 8 '15 at 14:05











            • 'The country' seems to assume something about membership demographics.

              – Edwin Ashworth
              Sep 8 '15 at 14:25











            • @EdwinAshworth I can't speak for the UK regarding this usage, but the ambiguity of "night" during the winter would apply in the UK as well as the US, though the ambiguity of "night" during the summer would be abbreviated (since the UK doesn't keep DST).

              – Paul Rowe
              Sep 8 '15 at 14:29












            • I'm just rather concerned that 'the country' isn't specified. It doesn't appear to be 'the one' where 'the language' largely originated.

              – Edwin Ashworth
              Sep 8 '15 at 14:40











            • Daylight Saving is practiced in the UK, by the way. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Summer_Time_in_Europe

              – JHCL
              Sep 8 '15 at 14:46















            -1














            The dark hours after 12 midnight can colloquially be referred to as either morning or night. It is considered morning because it is ante meridian (a.m.), but can be considered night because the sun isn't up.



            My personal experience indicates that anything between 4:00 a.m. and 12 noon typically isn't referred to as "night". Reasons? Here is some speculation:



            • During the winter months, the sun sets before 5:00 p.m. in many parts of the country, so "five o'clock at night" could refer to either 5:00 a.m. (it's still dark) and 5:00 p.m. (the sun has set).

            • During the summer months, the sun rises before 6:00 a.m. in many parts of the country.





            share|improve this answer























            • Nobody calls the day, night.

              – tchrist
              Sep 8 '15 at 14:05











            • 'The country' seems to assume something about membership demographics.

              – Edwin Ashworth
              Sep 8 '15 at 14:25











            • @EdwinAshworth I can't speak for the UK regarding this usage, but the ambiguity of "night" during the winter would apply in the UK as well as the US, though the ambiguity of "night" during the summer would be abbreviated (since the UK doesn't keep DST).

              – Paul Rowe
              Sep 8 '15 at 14:29












            • I'm just rather concerned that 'the country' isn't specified. It doesn't appear to be 'the one' where 'the language' largely originated.

              – Edwin Ashworth
              Sep 8 '15 at 14:40











            • Daylight Saving is practiced in the UK, by the way. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Summer_Time_in_Europe

              – JHCL
              Sep 8 '15 at 14:46













            -1












            -1








            -1







            The dark hours after 12 midnight can colloquially be referred to as either morning or night. It is considered morning because it is ante meridian (a.m.), but can be considered night because the sun isn't up.



            My personal experience indicates that anything between 4:00 a.m. and 12 noon typically isn't referred to as "night". Reasons? Here is some speculation:



            • During the winter months, the sun sets before 5:00 p.m. in many parts of the country, so "five o'clock at night" could refer to either 5:00 a.m. (it's still dark) and 5:00 p.m. (the sun has set).

            • During the summer months, the sun rises before 6:00 a.m. in many parts of the country.





            share|improve this answer













            The dark hours after 12 midnight can colloquially be referred to as either morning or night. It is considered morning because it is ante meridian (a.m.), but can be considered night because the sun isn't up.



            My personal experience indicates that anything between 4:00 a.m. and 12 noon typically isn't referred to as "night". Reasons? Here is some speculation:



            • During the winter months, the sun sets before 5:00 p.m. in many parts of the country, so "five o'clock at night" could refer to either 5:00 a.m. (it's still dark) and 5:00 p.m. (the sun has set).

            • During the summer months, the sun rises before 6:00 a.m. in many parts of the country.






            share|improve this answer












            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer










            answered Sep 8 '15 at 14:03









            Paul RowePaul Rowe

            4,095719




            4,095719












            • Nobody calls the day, night.

              – tchrist
              Sep 8 '15 at 14:05











            • 'The country' seems to assume something about membership demographics.

              – Edwin Ashworth
              Sep 8 '15 at 14:25











            • @EdwinAshworth I can't speak for the UK regarding this usage, but the ambiguity of "night" during the winter would apply in the UK as well as the US, though the ambiguity of "night" during the summer would be abbreviated (since the UK doesn't keep DST).

              – Paul Rowe
              Sep 8 '15 at 14:29












            • I'm just rather concerned that 'the country' isn't specified. It doesn't appear to be 'the one' where 'the language' largely originated.

              – Edwin Ashworth
              Sep 8 '15 at 14:40











            • Daylight Saving is practiced in the UK, by the way. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Summer_Time_in_Europe

              – JHCL
              Sep 8 '15 at 14:46

















            • Nobody calls the day, night.

              – tchrist
              Sep 8 '15 at 14:05











            • 'The country' seems to assume something about membership demographics.

              – Edwin Ashworth
              Sep 8 '15 at 14:25











            • @EdwinAshworth I can't speak for the UK regarding this usage, but the ambiguity of "night" during the winter would apply in the UK as well as the US, though the ambiguity of "night" during the summer would be abbreviated (since the UK doesn't keep DST).

              – Paul Rowe
              Sep 8 '15 at 14:29












            • I'm just rather concerned that 'the country' isn't specified. It doesn't appear to be 'the one' where 'the language' largely originated.

              – Edwin Ashworth
              Sep 8 '15 at 14:40











            • Daylight Saving is practiced in the UK, by the way. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Summer_Time_in_Europe

              – JHCL
              Sep 8 '15 at 14:46
















            Nobody calls the day, night.

            – tchrist
            Sep 8 '15 at 14:05





            Nobody calls the day, night.

            – tchrist
            Sep 8 '15 at 14:05













            'The country' seems to assume something about membership demographics.

            – Edwin Ashworth
            Sep 8 '15 at 14:25





            'The country' seems to assume something about membership demographics.

            – Edwin Ashworth
            Sep 8 '15 at 14:25













            @EdwinAshworth I can't speak for the UK regarding this usage, but the ambiguity of "night" during the winter would apply in the UK as well as the US, though the ambiguity of "night" during the summer would be abbreviated (since the UK doesn't keep DST).

            – Paul Rowe
            Sep 8 '15 at 14:29






            @EdwinAshworth I can't speak for the UK regarding this usage, but the ambiguity of "night" during the winter would apply in the UK as well as the US, though the ambiguity of "night" during the summer would be abbreviated (since the UK doesn't keep DST).

            – Paul Rowe
            Sep 8 '15 at 14:29














            I'm just rather concerned that 'the country' isn't specified. It doesn't appear to be 'the one' where 'the language' largely originated.

            – Edwin Ashworth
            Sep 8 '15 at 14:40





            I'm just rather concerned that 'the country' isn't specified. It doesn't appear to be 'the one' where 'the language' largely originated.

            – Edwin Ashworth
            Sep 8 '15 at 14:40













            Daylight Saving is practiced in the UK, by the way. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Summer_Time_in_Europe

            – JHCL
            Sep 8 '15 at 14:46





            Daylight Saving is practiced in the UK, by the way. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Summer_Time_in_Europe

            – JHCL
            Sep 8 '15 at 14:46











            -3














            1:00 am is not in the morning.



            Since 12:00 am is considered midnight then the hours that follow 12:00 till dawn or sunrise is night time.



            IMO, morning starts at sunrise and not before.






            share|improve this answer























            • Standard English usage would disagree with you.

              – Azor Ahai
              Jun 17 '16 at 4:33















            -3














            1:00 am is not in the morning.



            Since 12:00 am is considered midnight then the hours that follow 12:00 till dawn or sunrise is night time.



            IMO, morning starts at sunrise and not before.






            share|improve this answer























            • Standard English usage would disagree with you.

              – Azor Ahai
              Jun 17 '16 at 4:33













            -3












            -3








            -3







            1:00 am is not in the morning.



            Since 12:00 am is considered midnight then the hours that follow 12:00 till dawn or sunrise is night time.



            IMO, morning starts at sunrise and not before.






            share|improve this answer













            1:00 am is not in the morning.



            Since 12:00 am is considered midnight then the hours that follow 12:00 till dawn or sunrise is night time.



            IMO, morning starts at sunrise and not before.







            share|improve this answer












            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer










            answered Jun 17 '16 at 2:18









            DanDan

            1




            1












            • Standard English usage would disagree with you.

              – Azor Ahai
              Jun 17 '16 at 4:33

















            • Standard English usage would disagree with you.

              – Azor Ahai
              Jun 17 '16 at 4:33
















            Standard English usage would disagree with you.

            – Azor Ahai
            Jun 17 '16 at 4:33





            Standard English usage would disagree with you.

            – Azor Ahai
            Jun 17 '16 at 4:33

















            draft saved

            draft discarded
















































            Thanks for contributing an answer to English Language & Usage Stack Exchange!


            • Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!

            But avoid


            • Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.

            • Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.

            To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.




            draft saved


            draft discarded














            StackExchange.ready(
            function ()
            StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fenglish.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f272885%2f1-oclock-in-the-morning-or-1-oclock-at-night%23new-answer', 'question_page');

            );

            Post as a guest















            Required, but never shown





















































            Required, but never shown














            Required, but never shown












            Required, but never shown







            Required, but never shown

































            Required, but never shown














            Required, but never shown












            Required, but never shown







            Required, but never shown







            Popular posts from this blog

            How to create a command for the “strange m” symbol in latex? Announcing the arrival of Valued Associate #679: Cesar Manara Planned maintenance scheduled April 23, 2019 at 23:30 UTC (7:30pm US/Eastern)How do you make your own symbol when Detexify fails?Writing bold small caps with mathpazo packageplus-minus symbol with parenthesis around the minus signGreek character in Beamer document titleHow to create dashed right arrow over symbol?Currency symbol: Turkish LiraDouble prec as a single symbol?Plus Sign Too Big; How to Call adfbullet?Is there a TeX macro for three-legged pi?How do I get my integral-like symbol to align like the integral?How to selectively substitute a letter with another symbol representing the same letterHow do I generate a less than symbol and vertical bar that are the same height?

            Българска екзархия Съдържание История | Български екзарси | Вижте също | Външни препратки | Литература | Бележки | НавигацияУстав за управлението на българската екзархия. Цариград, 1870Слово на Ловешкия митрополит Иларион при откриването на Българския народен събор в Цариград на 23. II. 1870 г.Българската правда и гръцката кривда. От С. М. (= Софийски Мелетий). Цариград, 1872Предстоятели на Българската екзархияПодмененият ВеликденИнформационна агенция „Фокус“Димитър Ризов. Българите в техните исторически, етнографически и политически граници (Атлас съдържащ 40 карти). Berlin, Königliche Hoflithographie, Hof-Buch- und -Steindruckerei Wilhelm Greve, 1917Report of the International Commission to Inquire into the Causes and Conduct of the Balkan Wars

            Чепеларе Съдържание География | История | Население | Спортни и природни забележителности | Културни и исторически обекти | Религии | Обществени институции | Известни личности | Редовни събития | Галерия | Източници | Литература | Външни препратки | Навигация41°43′23.99″ с. ш. 24°41′09.99″ и. д. / 41.723333° с. ш. 24.686111° и. д.*ЧепелареЧепеларски Linux fest 2002Начало на Зимен сезон 2005/06Национални хайдушки празници „Капитан Петко Войвода“Град ЧепелареЧепеларе – народният ски курортbgrod.orgwww.terranatura.hit.bgСправка за населението на гр. Исперих, общ. Исперих, обл. РазградМузей на родопския карстМузей на спорта и скитеЧепеларебългарскибългарскианглийскитукИстория на градаСки писти в ЧепелареВремето в ЧепелареРадио и телевизия в ЧепелареЧепеларе мами с родопски чар и добри пистиЕвтин туризъм и снежни атракции в ЧепелареМестоположениеИнформация и снимки от музея на родопския карст3D панорами от ЧепелареЧепелареррр