Meaning: adj. indicating the beginning unit in a series.
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1. On January 1st, the New Year begins.
2. New Year's Eve is the day before January 1st.
3. From January 1st to February 1st is one calendar month.
4. It's January 1st, the year has come full circle.
5. The switch should be stayed down in 1st.
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6. I was born on July 1st.
7. The new hospital opens on July 1st.
8. The legislation is retroactive to 1st June.
9. We will celebrate on October 1st.
10. You must submit your application before January 1st.
11. I'm away on holiday until the 1st of June.
12. Between July 1st and October 1st, the central bank printed over 2 trillion roubles.
13. May 1st is labour day in a lot of countries.
14. The church was dedicated on 1st March 1805 to the local Saint Jude.
15. Our pay is reckoned from the 1st of the month.
16. The small streams are called 1st Order.
17. Dance in the dew on 1st May.
18. Wilson did not write back until 1st February, 1858.
19. Even before it began on January 1st, problems arose.
20. Plenty of opportunities for revenge Odds 7-4 Prospects 1st.
21. The 1st be the day for dope man.
22. We received your letter the 1st of March.
23. I am writing to inform you that your rent will be increased to £60 p.w. from October 1st.
24. The Chinese people celebrated the golden jubilee of the founding of their People's Republic on October 1st,1999.
25. It's worth remembering that prices go up on February 1st.
26. The deadline for the submission of proposals is May 1st.
27. It has to be in before the deadline of July 1st.
28. The store must clear its summer inventories by September 1st.
29. The border, effectively closed since 1981, will be opened as of January the 1st.
30. I am writing in reply to your letter of 1st June.