• @shadowintheday2
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    7 months ago

    I didn’t know memes could smell like they’re old through the screen until I saw this one

    Google logo before Corporate Memphis bullshit and the dude using a feet to hold his cup of tea just like the classical antiquity raptor, it’s just perfect

    • @robocallOP
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      77 months ago

      This meme was passed down to me by my mother.

    • @KrapKake
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      37 months ago

      Like that old book smell.

      • @SkyeHarith
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        87 months ago

        Nah, base 10 is superior than base 10. Atleast base 10 isn’t base 10

    • @lugal
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      27 months ago

      Didn’t they have base 60?

      • @[email protected]
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        17 months ago

        Yes, but they actually combine base 12 with base 5 to get base 60.

        And how they do it, is also quite interesting:

        With one hand you can count to twelve. Use each finger segment of the four fingers to denote a number and count by placing the thumb.

        Base of index finger is 1, middle is 2 and top is 3. Middle finger has 4,5,6, ring finger has 7,8,9. Pinky has 10,11,12.

        Now use the other hand to count how often you reached 12.

        In terms of the names of the numbers, it goes 1-12 like we also have in English (that’s why eleven and twelve have unique names).

        And then you have 1-5 dozens, to get up to 60.

        • @lugal
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          17 months ago

          Sure? Because the only cuniform numbers I could find are base 10 and than 60. They might have counted differently with their hands, I wasn’t there to observe.

          But the thing you describe, I remember vaguely that it’s ancient Egypt. Neither is related to modern English by the way. I guess you mixed up alot.

          • @[email protected]
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            27 months ago

            No, I’m not sure. I learned it from a TikTok video.

            Google only shows me Babylonian cuneiform.

            Google does show some sources that claim eleven and twelve are evidence of a base-12 influence, but most sources disagree with that theory.

            So yeah, perhaps I mixed it up.

  • @[email protected]
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    7 months ago

    It’s a holdover from an older base-12 counting system, one of many, many relics of the fact that English is an ever evolving language.

    Edit: it’s not a holdover from a different base, but a different way of counting. See comment below for details.

    • @robocallOP
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      77 months ago

      30 years ago was the best Internet

    • @AngryCommieKender
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      37 months ago

      Don’t age me that much. Google isn’t quite 30, only 25.

  • masterofn001
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    67 months ago

    Because there are 2 of them. And they look like L’s.

    So it’s L-even

    • @Hule
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      17 months ago

      Great! Now do twelve!

  • @shotgun_crab
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    7 months ago

    Same reason why it’s “once” and not “dieciuno” in spanish :)

    • @bitwaba
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      17 months ago

      Isn’t that shit confusing? Once is one in English and eleven in Spanish. You can’t explain that!

      • @Verqix
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        47 months ago

        As long as we are changing things, why not get rid of the order shift as well? Teenty one, teenty two, teenty three, teenty four, etc.

        • Dharma Curious (he/him)
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          27 months ago

          I like this. Not only does it feel right, but it also sounds like they’re the smallest, cutest numbers. They’re teenty.

        • Bob
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          17 months ago

          The “-ty” already means ten so it makes more sense to say onety-one, onety-two, etc.

  • @x4740N
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    47 months ago

    Pretty sure its would be ichi-juu-ichi in Japanese

    • NickwithaC
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      77 months ago

      just juu-ichi I think the singular ten is implied.

      • @[email protected]
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        27 months ago

        Indeed. Same rule applies to one hundred (hyaku) and one thousand (sen), but not after ten thousand (ichi-man, ichi-oku, i-cchou, etc.), except in the intervals between every 4th zero like in the first set (juu-man, hyaku-man, sen-man, etc.). I love Japanese.

  • @nycki
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    27 months ago

    why doesn’t “one” rhyme with “bone”?