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For context, “the turn of the 20th century” is ambiguous. In your case it means the beginning, but it could also be correctly understood as the year 1999.
Better to say “at the beginning of the 20th century” to avoid confusion.
“Turn of the century” always means the beginning of the century
“Turn of the 19th century” has been used for the end of the 19th/beginning of the 20th.
I'll make sure to tell the Smithsonian 😃, it was just a copy/paste from their site for people who don't want to click the link. But doesn't "the TURN of the 20th century" imply that it's the start of, not the end of the century... like 1999 is near the turn of the 21st century, which occurred in 2000.
Yes, it very much so does imply the start of the century
It used to mean the end of the 19th, start of the 20th, but it evolved. No need to be snarky, I’m not fighting museums here.
Source: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Turn_of_the_century which has additional sources. Unfortunately most sources aren’t clear either (both Cambridge and Webster dictionaries state that it’s when a century ends and another begins, without more info if the century is specified).
I’m just trying to help disambiguate.
It comes off as needlessly pedantic