at 8:19 o'clock

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sitifan

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What time will it be when the minute-hand has turned 72 degrees from its position at 8:19 o'clock? (Basic Geometry, by George David Birkhoff and Ralph Beatley, third edition, page 51)
Is the expression "at 8:19 o'clock" correct?
 
Not in modern English. When and where was this published?
 
Adding to what GoesStation said, nowadays in American English we generally use o'clock only for the exact hour: three o'clock, four o'clock etc .

Rarely I have heard someone ask "What o'clock is it?" But very rarely.
 
It was published in 1959 in the United States of America.
The wording was archaic even sixty years ago. I'd guess the first edition was published decades earlier.
 
Rarely I have heard someone ask "What o'clock is it?" But very rarely.

The only person I have heard use that was a Japanese post-grad student in the UK. It sounded so odd to me that I remember it twenty years later. Only now have I found out that she could have picked it up from a native speaker. She was studying linguistics.
 
... in American English we generally use o'clock only for the exact hour: three o'clock, four o'clock etc .
That goes for all varieties of standard English.
 
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