Why do Americans call their national holiday "Fourth of July", although they are using the month/day/year date format?

Why do Americans call their national holiday "Fourth of July", although they are using the month/day/year date format?

btw....

I can use any of them

DMY
>Kolmaskymmenes kesäkuuta kaksituhattaseitsemäntoista

YMD
>Kaksituhattaseitsemäntoista, kesäkuun kolmaskymmenes

MDY
>Kesäkuun kolmaskymmenes kaksituhattaseitsemäntoista

>dmy
fjerde juli to tusinde og sytten
>ymd
to tusinde og sytten juli den fjerde
>mdy
juli den fjerde to tusinde og sytten

>Canada
Seems like the guy that tries too hard to please everyone at once

No we just don't give a fuck 2bh. No one remembers how we orginally did it and we do business with the Americans mostly. So it's whatever we feel like putting down. I mix it up all the time.

To distinguish the holiday from the date.

wut

i like you

Why do you like punching yourself?

I could ask you the same thing, my german friend

Lol july the fourth

?
We're using the d.m.y format, which the rest of the world is using and in addition to that allowed the ISO8601 norm for official stuff (yyyy-mm-dd), which is the right, future oriented way in regards of the EU.

You're using and mixing all formats with different delimiters together. A total mess.

In another decade time will cease to exist in Germany

>being an edgy frog poster

...

why wasn't the standard set to be the most commonly used format worldwide?

Because it's shit for sorting

>German autism

>weighs himself in stone like a cave man
>uses miles to measure distances
>uses gallons to measure volume
>claims to be metric
>in 2017

I'll forgive you for not understanding the beauty of imperial, but I won't forgive you if you call me metric again