• @[email protected]
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        13
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        13 days ago

        Hour. Just a weird way to say 12:00 and 15:00 or 3pm and whatever 12:00 is in am/pm talk

        • @samus12345
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          613 days ago

          12am is midnight and 12pm is noon. But most people just say “noon” or “midnight” because it’s less confusing.

          • @toynbee
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            613 days ago

            That is confusing. “PM” is “post meridian” or, as I understand it, after the middle. One would think it wouldn’t be PM until 12:01 or at least 12:00:01.

            Which is why I, as you said, use “noon” and “midnight.”

            • @[email protected]
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              413 days ago

              I can never remember it properly either but when someone reminds me (thanks samus12345) which way around it is it does kind of make sense.

              If you think of 12:00 as literally an infinitesimal slice of time it’s not really possible to give it an am/pm distinction, as it is literally the devider between the two. BUT, in a more real-life approach 12:00 is probably not an infinitesimal slice of time but the minute after a digital clock flipped to 12:00. That can be 12:00:00.00004 or 12:00:30 or 12:00:59.999944. And all those are indisputably pm.

                • @toynbee
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                  113 days ago

                  That’s not a bad suggestion, but may interfere with 24 hour clocks.

            • @samus12345
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              113 days ago

              Correct - technically, noon is neither am nor pm, but clocks and the like have to have SOMETHING there, so am for midnight and pm for noon was arbitrarily chosen.

      • @Voyajer
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        213 days ago

        Hour, it’s noon Monday on the Russian side and 3pm Sunday on the American side.