• @IAmNotACat
    link
    English
    7720 days ago

    Why on earth do Americans call a single bed ‘twin’?

    • @TheDeepState
      link
      English
      6720 days ago

      Because you can put two in a room.

          • VindictiveJudge
            link
            English
            319 days ago

            Unfortunately, Mace is the council making stupid-ass decisions.

      • @cosmicrookie
        link
        English
        520 days ago

        That makes no sense! I’d say that this greatly depends on the size of the room. Unsless rooms have standard sizes in the US!?

        • @TheDeepState
          link
          English
          020 days ago

          Don’t forget that you can stack them and make bunk beds too.

          • @cosmicrookie
            link
            English
            120 days ago

            Why arent they called triplets then?

            • @TheDeepState
              link
              English
              120 days ago

              Because you can’t reasonably get three in a room whereas you can reasonably get two in the majority of bedrooms.

                • @TheDeepState
                  link
                  English
                  420 days ago

                  I looked it up to put an end to this. American hotels call them twin beds because they were a matching set of beds put in a room.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      English
      31
      edit-2
      20 days ago

      According to this:

      https://english.stackexchange.com/questions/27810/why-do-americans-call-single-beds-twin-beds

      In the 1950s, a single was as wide as the average person’s shoulders. A twin was a single & a half. A double was two singles. A queen was a single & a twin. A king was 2 twins (or 3 singles). Nowadays, the single is forgotten, so everyone is confused. When I was a child in the 1950’s, my bed was a twin and you could put two first graders in it side by side. My best friend had a single bed, so when I slept over at her house, I slept in her bed and she slept on the floor.

      EDIT: I don’t think that that’s correct, though, because while beds have become larger, it sounds like the twin was very much around in the 1950s.

      https://www.ebohemians.com/a-guide-to-antique-bed-sizes-understanding-the-history-and-variations/

      Single beds, also known as twin beds, are the smallest antique bed size and the most common size for children’s bedrooms. They were widely used in the late 19th and early 20th centuries and measured around 39 inches wide and 75 inches long. However, some antique single beds may be shorter, measuring around 72 inches long.

    • @Otakulad
      link
      English
      1120 days ago

      I heard it was because siblings shared rooms and they had two beds in the room, hence twins.