Normally idioms are language specific, but number of hours and days are the same.

  • Björn Tantau
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    -151 day ago

    Number of days in a week (or the existence of weeks at all) aren’t universal, though. And technically not even hours.

    Only the length of the day, year and moon cycle are universal (or earthiversal).

    • kersploosh
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      541 day ago

      Your first point is technically correct, but 24-hour days and 7-day weeks are a de facto global standard at this point in history. There are outliers, like the Javanese 5-day week or the experimental 5-day Soviet calendar, but they are few and far between.

    • @marcos
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      131 day ago

      Hum… I think the week is more widely adopted than the solar year.

      But neither is universal. AFAIK, the length of the day is.

      • @[email protected]
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        217 hours ago

        Didn’t the Egyptians figure it out? Or someone before them was like “SHADOWS! SHADOWS THEN! SHADOWS NOW!”

        • @marcos
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          316 hours ago

          I think it was the Babylonians that created the hour/minute/second and a precursor of the meter on the process. It’s high-tech bronze-age innovation, that got hyped-out so much that it took the entire Old-World by storm, so the Egyptians got them too.

          • @[email protected]
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            116 hours ago

            omg the babylonians, fielded the best footie team in all of existence, except for other examples.

          • @someguy3OP
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            016 hours ago

            Meter was recent (historically speaking). They defined the circumference of the world as 40,000 km.