Mine is that I pour the milk before the cereal. people are always extremely confused by that.

  • @I_Fart_Glitter
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    1410 months ago

    after midnight, past midday”

    AM, PM. It actually means ante meridiem and post meridiem, Latin for “Before Noon” and “After Noon,” but the above also works and is in English.

    • SanguinePar
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      710 months ago

      Latin for “Before Noon” and “After Noon,”

      I’m going to start using BN and AN, just to confuse people.

    • @[email protected]
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      fedilink
      610 months ago

      It’s terrible as a mnemonic though. “After” and “post” both mean the same thing, and the other words both start by M.

    • @[email protected]
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      fedilink
      English
      310 months ago

      I don’t think they’re confused by times like 1pm.

      At least for my brain, 12pm and 12am are the sticking points.

      As you note, pm is Latin for after noon, yet we call noon 12pm. Noon isn’t anymore after itself than it is before itself. Neither makes any sense.

      With 12am, we generally seem to think about midnight as the end of the day, even though it’s really the start of the new day. The Latin isn’t confusing here, but the numbers get real weird. We start the day counting at 12:00, go up to 12:59, and then reset the count to 1 an hour in? Our 12h clocks are split between being 0-indexed, and a weird variant of modulus 12.

      I’m clearly overthinking things, but I don’t always immediately remember which 12 is which. Latin doesn’t help.

      With 00 it’s clear which time we’re talking about, and which calendar date it’s part of. It’s also the easiest way to sort out which 12 gets mislabeled what.