• @platypus_plumba
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    10 months ago

    What?

    Edit: my research says that half-fifth is how they call 4.5, which is insane. Then they multiply that by 20, holy shit, they are mathematical geniuses. So:

    7 + 4.5 * 20.

    WHAT THE FUCK.

    • @Hedin
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      2610 months ago

      deleted by creator

      • IWantToFuckSpez
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        10 months ago

        How about in telling time? Like half seven means 7:30 in British English but is 6:30 in Dutch and German

        • lemmyng
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          10 months ago

          That one at least makes some sense: halfway to seven vs seven and a half. The more confusing ones are quarter seven (6:15) and three quarter seven (6:45). If you didn’t learn to tell time with an analog clock it can throw you off since they are the opposite of eg quarter to seven. It’s even worse - in German it’s a regional thing, and they’ll look at you as of you’ve grown a second head if you use a form they’re not used to.

        • @joel_feila
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          110 months ago

          american time keeping for the win in this case.

          • @Hedin
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            010 months ago

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            • @joel_feila
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              110 months ago

              Well i was talking about the lack of relative time. It is clear if you say 6:30

              • @Hedin
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                010 months ago

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    • @virku
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      410 months ago

      Half fifth isn’t 4.5 but 90 because of 4.5 * 20. Its the same with half third being 50 and half fourth is 70.

      • @Hedin
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        1310 months ago

        deleted by creator

        • @virku
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          10 months ago

          Norwegian, but I was tought this by a dane.

          Fems is the short as you say, but that isn’t really possible to translate correctly. Thats why people translate it to fifth. The proper danish for a fifth is en femtedel. I might be mistanken here, but I dont think any dane would ever talk about 4.5 as halv fem (half five), but as fire komma fem.

          The exception is when we talk about the time in the nordics. Then half passes four is half five.

          • @PlutoniumAcid
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            10 months ago

            Dane here. We don’t use half-third to say 2½ except for the time of day, like half-twelve is 11:30.

            The way we count is indeed that way though: halvfems is short for halvfemsindstyve, literally half-five-times-twenty, meaning ½5×20 = 4.5×20 = 90.

            We don’t use “fems” tough. That would mean femsindstyve which is 5*20 and we say a hundred of course.

            So we have this:

            • 10 = ti = ten
            • 20 = tyve = twenty.
            • 30 = tredive = thirty.
            • 40 = fyrre = forty.
            • 50 = halvtreds = short for half-three-times-twenty.
            • 60 = treds = short for three times twenty.
            • 70 = halvfjerds = short for half four times twenty.
            • 80 = firs = short for four times twenty.
            • 90 = halvfems = short for half five times twenty.
            • 97 syvoghalvfems = seven and half five times twenty.
            • 100 = et hundrede = One hundred.
            • @nicolairathjen
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              10 months ago

              There is a relic from this system still in use: halvanden (1 and a half). Though I doubt many people know the origin of the word.