GiuseppeAndTheYeti@midwest.social to Showerthoughts@lemmy.worldEnglish · 8 months agoI hear phrases like "half-past", "quarter til", and "quarter after" way less often since digital clocks have became more commonplace.message-squaremessage-square157fedilinkarrow-up1441arrow-down118
arrow-up1423arrow-down1message-squareI hear phrases like "half-past", "quarter til", and "quarter after" way less often since digital clocks have became more commonplace.GiuseppeAndTheYeti@midwest.social to Showerthoughts@lemmy.worldEnglish · 8 months agomessage-square157fedilink
minus-squareZozano@lemy.lollinkfedilinkarrow-up1·edit-28 months agoIt is objectively wrong to say 14 o’clock, because “o’clock” refers to the orientation of an analogue clock. Saying “it’s nine in the morning” is redundant in a 24 hour system, because nine would never be anything other than that. To say 'it’s nine hundred" reduces the ambiguity slightly (because you can’t really say o’clock). If you simply say “it’s nine” then other people might ask “what’s nine?” Is it “nine past nine”? Or are you telling me “no” in German? Nine hundred is pretty clear, but not to our primitive ears
It is objectively wrong to say 14 o’clock, because “o’clock” refers to the orientation of an analogue clock.
Saying “it’s nine in the morning” is redundant in a 24 hour system, because nine would never be anything other than that.
To say 'it’s nine hundred" reduces the ambiguity slightly (because you can’t really say o’clock).
If you simply say “it’s nine” then other people might ask “what’s nine?”
Is it “nine past nine”? Or are you telling me “no” in German?
Nine hundred is pretty clear, but not to our primitive ears