• hemko@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    11 hours ago

    Finnish is actually 9*10+2

    Yhdeksänkymmentäkaksi

    Yhdeksän = nine

    Kymmentä = of ten

    Kaksi = two

  • Luccus@feddit.org
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    11 hours ago

    Isn’t it mostly 9*10+2? 9 * ty (implying 10) + 2.

    Even german does that, although weirdly the way you can’t just write down long numbers reasily one by one: Zwei (2) und ((and) neun- (9) -zig (*10)).

  • schibutzu@lemm.ee
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    14 hours ago

    I’m actually impressed by this map. The French speaking part of Switzerland is not only differentiated from the German speaking part, it is also differently coloured than France, since Swiss French has more sensible numbers.

  • Enkrod@feddit.org
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    15 hours ago

    Note to self: For learning a scandinavian language - learn Swedish instead of Danish.

  • Nangijala@feddit.dk
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    22 hours ago

    That meme is so lame. 92 in Danish is two and a half fives. The 20 part is old-fashioned and literally nobody has used that since the 1800s.

    2 and a half fives’ twentieth = outdated cringe. 2 and a half fives = actually how it is said today.

    It’s still a friggin nightmare to get someone’s Phone number verbally, though.

      • Nangijala@feddit.dk
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        12 hours ago

        More like 2 and half fives. Half five is our word for 90. So in essence we say 2 and 90 but the word 90 is half five.

        80 is fours

        70 is half fours

        60 is threes

        50 is half threes

        40 is forty

        30 is thirty

        20 is twenty

        10 is ten.

        Oh and a 100 is a hundred. So I dunno what happened between 50 and 90, but I’m sure there is a funny story behind that somewhere.

        • hemko@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          11 hours ago

          You’re just digging yourself and Denmark into deeper hole. It’s fucked up and you know it

          • Nangijala@feddit.dk
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            10 hours ago

            I never claimed otherwise. I’m just tired that this 92 meme is using outdated language (or numbers rather) to make a point that may have been reasonable to make in the 1800s, but not today. Doesn’t mean our number system is any less retarded today. If anything, I’m just adding on to the fact that Danes are notoriously lazy with the Danish language and will cut corners with all words and sentences the same way Americans cut corners when they chop everybody’s name up into bite sized nicknames. For us, though, it’s more like slurring at the end of a word and flat out ignoring letters that are very clearly there in the word.

            Woe is the poor asshole who decides to immigrate here and attempts to learn the cancerous gargle that is our language.

            That said, it is still the best language to curse in and when used in poetry, it can be downright majestic.

            But yeah, our curses are superior to all words in the English language.

            My favourite for life will always be kræftedme = cancer eat me - usually uttered in a sentence to underline how pissed off you are and how serious you are about being pissed off.

    • petersr@lemmy.world
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      Dane here. No one actively thinks of 90 (halvfems, 2 and a half fives) as a mathematical expression. Is is just a word for 90. So we say 2+90 like Germany.

      Would it have been nice if that word meant “9 tens”, yes, but Danish is a just a stupid language where you have to learn a bunch of things by heart unfortunately.

      • werefreeatlast@lemmy.world
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        17 hours ago

        How would you say trump is like Hitler? Do you have to describe the Holocaust in few words within a long ass German style word?

        • bstix@feddit.dk
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          16 hours ago

          Easy. We often use idioms for comparisons.

          One old way would be: “Trump and Hitler are both 2/3 yards from one piece” which means “They’re cut from the same (bad) fabric”.

          Fabric was cut in an old measurement"alen" which was 2 foot or 2/3 yards, so simply stating the length would be understood as fabric, similar to how everyone knows that a 2x4s is a piece of wood and such.

      • GoosLife@lemmy.world
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        16 hours ago

        No, in Danish the “half five” part means the same as “half past 4” on the clock: 4.5.

        Then the part that most people omit nowadays, sindstyvende, means times 20.

        (Half past 4) times 20 = 90.

        • Nangijala@feddit.dk
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          16 hours ago

          When you have to write down numbers, but the person reading you the numbers speaks slowly 💀

          Them: “Two…”

          Me: “2”

          Them: “… and fifty”

          Me: “… 2 - 52”

          Them: “Six…”

          Me: “6”

          Them: “… and twenty.”

          Me: “6 - 26”

          🫠

  • CherryBullets@lemmy.ca
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    13 hours ago

    French language uses math to speak numbers if anyone is wondering about France.

    Edit: Apparently I wasn’t precise enough for the dude below. It starts at 70 and ends at 99 every time you get to those numbers. De rien, tabarnak.

    • rumba@lemmy.zip
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      1 day ago

      Ehh, i’m not giving France a pass either.

      The answer to 100 - 8 should not be four twenties and a twelve. We’re counting, not making change.

      French counting is bunk. Way, Way, better then Denmark though apparently

      • Nariom@lemmy.world
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        1 day ago

        the thing nobody mentions is that the 4x20 part became a word that just means 80 in people’s mind, it kinda not literal anymore, but the Swiss and Belgian ways are still better (edit the 4x20+10 is similarly just 90)

        • rumba@lemmy.zip
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          6 hours ago

          e a word that just means 80 in people’s mind, it kinda not literal anymore, but the Swiss and Belgian ways are still better (edit the 4x20+10 is s

          And if it was 28 syllables, it would still be 80 in people’s minds. But the words are still four twenty ten eight for what could easily just be nine eight.

          I get it, but it is really inefficient for something as oft used as counting.

          If it makes you feel better, English is full of crap like that which doesn’t make any sense and I’ll own that as a trash language :)

          • Nariom@lemmy.world
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            1 hour ago

            Yeah that’s why i say the Belgian and Swiss ways are better, their French speakers have dedicated words for 70 80 90. That being said I not sure but I guess in a lot of languages those words just mean 7x10 8x10 9x10 … we understand base 10 better but that’s still a calculation in disguise, historically (and still in some cultures?) base 10 isn’t the norm (hence the 4x20 among others).

        • vandsjov@feddit.dk
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          24 hours ago

          Most Danes does not know how 92 is constructed - it is just as picture one, second calculation: 2 and halvfems = 92.

          However, I do feel like we’re using Imperial unites.

    • vandsjov@feddit.dk
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      24 hours ago

      I think the first picture jumps over a little bit of calculation:

      9 x 10 + 2

      2 + 9 x 10

      p.s. The third one makes total sense!

  • letsgo@lemm.ee
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    21 hours ago

    We can also do 2+90 here in the UK. There’s a nursery rhyme about “four and twenty blackbirds” that I think the kids are still learning.

  • atro_city@fedia.io
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    For a real explanation of this watch this illuminating video.

    TL;DW According to the perons, it’s based on counting sheep and from base 20. 1 score = 20 sheep. 2 score = 40 sheep.
    To get to 50, you have 2.5 score, but they don’t say “two and a half”. They are quite Germanic and say “halfway to 3” (Germans do this too). So, 50 = half three score.

    The video also points out that English has (as the hodgepodge of a language it is) yet another remnant of Germanic languages: 13-19 are not “te(e)n-three to te(e)n-nine”, but “three-te(e)n to nine-te(e)n”, just like in German “drei-zehn bis neun-zehn”.

    It’s quite easy to mock other languages, but there’s always a reason for why things are the way they are. Think of Chesterton’s fence.

    • HorreC@lemmy.world
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      22 hours ago

      I just tried to say tentyfive like four times in a row and I couldnt speak for 20 seconds after that. Thank you.

    • Kellamity@sh.itjust.works
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      I agree with your broader point about linguistics, but Chesterton’s fence has never sat right with me. Consider the inverse:

      This annoying and unnecessary fence is an inconvenience, but since nobody can remember what it’s for, we dare not remove it

      • CannedYeet@lemmy.world
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        Chesterton’s fence is a warning not to commit this logical error: I don’t know what this fence is for, therefore I know there is no reason for it.

        It doesn’t say never to remove it. It means you should try and figure out why it’s there and ask around before removing it.

      • 🔍🦘🛎@lemmy.world
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        It’s just a logic exercise that advicates forethought when enacting change. The bigger problem is people taking parables and thought experiments as gospel, faithfully adhering to the text without considering it’s intent.

        More people need to read Asimov’s Foundation

      • ✺roguetrick✺@lemmy.world
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        I honestly don’t understand what’s insightful about it. It encourages a functional viewpoint that results in you inventing proposed uses for something that is a vestige of an inefficiency. Justifying something useless isn’t curiosity, it’s just masturbation. You should identify how a structure interacts with it’s current environment. There’s a reason functionalism is considered worthless in sociology.

        • TheMagicRat@lemm.ee
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          13 hours ago

          I think the point is more that you should take care to consider why it was put there because it might be something that is not immediately obvious.

          You should identify how a structure interacts with it’s current environment.

          OK, but what if it was put there to stop something that only happens once every 10 years? Without taking the time to learn this, you might tear it down and then after a few years you’re scrambling to solve a problem that was already solved.

          • ✺roguetrick✺@lemmy.world
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            @Kellamity@sh.itjust.works

            I’m very hostile to excuses for conservatism because they’re often positions to apologize for power structures that have a secondary gain. The point I’m making is you should never approach something that previously existed as if it was beneficial by default. It’s often not and that’s a fallacy as much as automatically believing it’s useless. That’s what this guy was doing with his Catholic apologia.

            You should consider history to develop predictive theories(like what you’re describing). But those are always subordinate to observable reality and bothering with trying to justify them too much is generally worthless. Sometimes you just need to act, considering inaction is an action itself.

            In essence, it’s a bad argument because it both presupposes you don’t interrogate why things exist(you do, that’s the entire point of the argument in the first place) and argues that an unknown reason might exist you might have to defer to. No shit. There might also be an unknown reason that it’s incredibly destructive. Neither of those themselves are an argument, but one is certainly an appeal to tradition masked by an analogy.

    • kungen@feddit.nu
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      there’s always a reason for why things are the way they are

      Of course, no one is saying that the Danes were so drunk that they simply wanted to make their numbering so much different than everyone else. The problem is that they don’t want to change it, probably because “it has always been this way” or something.

      Even Norwegian, which was historically more like Danish, changed to using “normal” counting in the 1950s. So it can be done, but Danes seemingly don’t want to change, despite the fact it makes their language harder to learn/use.

      • atro_city@fedia.io
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        24 hours ago

        Change it to what? Twenty-one? One Twenty? Four times twenty and one? Four time twenty plus ten and five? You could go the Germanic way, the Anglo-Saxon way, or the French way. Probably there are more ways to express numbers.

        It’s not as straight forward as imperial to metric, where metric is logical and imperial isn’t. A vigesimal system is logical, just like binary or hexadecimal.

        • joel_feila@lemmy.world
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          18 hours ago

          even imperial had a logic when it was made, same with every old measurement system. Everyone has hands, fingers, and arms boom you have small scale. The acre was once just what a single ox and plow could do in 1 day. there was never a need to square feet per acre, who would ever need that. Plus look at how old system were written. Try uses the metric system with roman numerals.

          • atro_city@fedia.io
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            14 hours ago

            How many inches are there in a foot? How many in a yard? How many in a mile? More importantly: why? The foot is from a duodecimal system (12 points = 1 line, 12 lines = 1 inch, 12 inches = 1 foot), but then then suddenly 3 feet = 1 yard.

            Also the imperial system is simple, not logical. Sure, it’s based on body parts and simple things like that, but every moron could’ve seen that hands have different sizes. Now you have about 3 imperial systems (international, British, US) maybe more even more if the old colonies invented more units. Everyone knows the way forward for units it the SI units. It’s logical, it’s straight forward, and it’s used worldwide - except for a minority of regions that are staunchly are against it.

      • dufkm@lemmy.world
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        It’s a shame that, when Norwegians changed their counting system, the suggestion of using “to-ti” didn’t catch on for 20. It would be analogous to saying “twoty” in English.

      • atro_city@fedia.io
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        What’s your suggestion for a change to the Danish counting system? Do you think it is as obvious as going from imperial to metric?

        • DragonTypeWyvern@midwest.social
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          Yes.

          Stop being weird, Danes, literally everyone else figured it out.

          It’S tHeiR gErmaN hEriTaGe

          If the Frisians can figure out how not to be a bunch of weird number freaks while running around on clogs on their dikes and being half fucked up French the Danes have no excuse.

    • rumba@lemmy.zip
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      but there’s always a reason

      By and large, there’s a reason for everything, but it’s just not always a good reason.

      If I have 100 rocks and take away 8, the answer to how many rocks I Have should not require a math problem. We’re counting, not making change. If your counting system isn’t decimal-based, you’re no better off than the US using imperial measurements.

  • VonReposti@feddit.dk
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    2 days ago

    Even worse. 90 in old Danish is “halvfemsindstyve” but it is rarely used today. The “sinds” part is derived from “sinde” means multiplied with but it is not in use in Danish anymore. That leaves halvfems, meaning half to the five (which is not used alone anymore) and tyve meaning twenty (as it still does).

    We are in current Danish shortening it to halvfems which actually just means “half to the five” in old Danish (2.5) to say 90. 92 is then “tooghalvfems” (two and half to the five, or 2+2.5). The “sindstyve” part (multiplied with 20) fell out of favour.

    So we at least have some rules to the madness. Were just not following them at all anymore.

    • HorreC@lemmy.world
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      How did you guys even get to this thought process for saying this sort of thing? Why would you work in fractions for whole numbers in language to start? Is this a monarch thing like they fancied themselves a math wizard so they said it like it was a solution on countdown and others mimicked to keep them happy/sound smart themselves?

      • VonReposti@feddit.dk
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        The reason is that the Danish numbering system is based on a vigesimal (base-20) system instead of the decimal system. Why is a good question but it might have been influenced by French during a time where numbers from 50-100 is less frequently used, making them prone to complexity. The fractions simply occur since you need at least one half of twenty (10) to make the change from e.g 50 to 60 in a 20-based system.

        • HorreC@lemmy.world
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          22 hours ago

          why would you avoid the fraction and use it up to 100 then minus 8. I dont have a lot of an issue with it being base 20 but the idea that talking in numbers you have to know fractions for a child is WILD to me. You have to do like a month of understanding math fractions to get how to speak whole numbers.

          • VonReposti@feddit.dk
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            18 hours ago

            We don’t really learn the reason, we just memorise the word for the number. Kinda like you know the word “dog” means a four legged cute creature, but not why the name is “dog”. The old rules are not something we are teached, I just got curious after a confused foreigner made me think about the system for a second :p

        • VaalaVasaVarde@sopuli.xyz
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          That’s the technical reason, another reason is that the Danes tried to out-French the French, as they were very hip at the time.

        • EddoWagt@feddit.nl
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          2 days ago

          But how did Danish end up like that even though it’s quite similar to Germanic languages and obviously neighbouring Germany?

          • bstix@feddit.dk
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            English also has words like dozen (12) and score (20).

            I guess it came from the physical counting in trading. Imagine counting 96 small items. It makes sense to group them into scores and then count the scores. 1 score 2 score 3 score 4 score and a half score. Then there are few remaining that didn’t fit it neatly in scores and then counted last. That’s a total of 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 plus the 4 and a half scores.

          • VonReposti@feddit.dk
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            No idea. We probably had a period where we traded a lot with the French and got influenced by the vigesimal system that way, creating the abomination of a Frankenstein monster we have today.

      • Viking_Hippie@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        24 hours ago

        How

        Why

        Dane here. My guess is utter madness resulting from a history of overdosing on fly agaric filtered through the urine of slaves, followed by a distressingly long period of Catholicism.

        Frankly, it’s a wonder that our ancestors didn’t come up with an even MORE bizarre way of saying numbers and other things!

        • vaultdweller013@sh.itjust.works
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          18 hours ago

          Also I’m pretty sure losing folks to stupid wars in England didn’t help, the Great Heathen army and the conquest of England by Sweyn Forkbeard come to mind. No the relative prosperity and peace of Cnut the Great doesn’t make up for the theoretical brain drain.

      • thebestaquaman@lemmy.world
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        Little fun-fact: We still have a trace of this left in Norwegian, where the most common way to say “1.5” is not “en og en halv” (“one and a half”) but “halvannen” which roughly translates to “half second”.

        We abandoned the “half third”, “half fourth” etc. very long ago (if we ever used them), but “halvannen” just rolls nicely off the tongue.

        • VonReposti@feddit.dk
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          We actually still say “halvanden” in Danish too. Everything else is not used (except for halvfems which means 90…)

            • VonReposti@feddit.dk
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              Halvfjerds for 70 but yes. Firs is 80 though, so that doesn’t make in much easier.

              Fjerde = fourth, fire = four. That makes “half to the fourth” become “halv til fjerde” or “halvfjerds” while “four times twenty” becomes “firsindstyve” and shortened to new Danish “firs”

        • KSP Atlas@sopuli.xyz
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          In polish, “półtora” means one and a half, it comes from a proto-Slavic word meaning “half-second” for some reason

    • nickwitha_k (he/him)@lemmy.sdf.org
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      This is making my brain hurt. I need to try reading a few more times but, if I am understanding it correctly, the old Danish way of saying it is mathematically incorrect?

      Half-to-five == 2.5

      2.5*20 == 50

      Did I read that correctly?

        • Match!!@pawb.social
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          for no particular reason, in English, 5:30 can be said as “half past 5” but never “half until 6”. (but “five thirty” is still more common)

          • tamal3@lemmy.world
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            Quarter-past the hour, and quarter-till, are still common. Though perhaps less common as we move towards digital clocks.

      • TaTTe@lemmy.world
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        I’m not Danish, but I think he meant 4.5 instead of 2.5. It’s like halfway from 4 to 5, not from 0 to 5.

        A similar word exists in Finnish too, when going from 1 to 2: “puolitoista” translates to “half second”, like halfway to the second number, and is commonly used to refer to 1.5, BUT without any multiplication shenanigans.

        • VonReposti@feddit.dk
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          Correct.

          • Half to the second (halvanden, still in use today) = 1.5
          • Half to the third (halvtredje) = 2.5
          • Half to the fourth (halvfjerde) = 3.5
          • Half to the fifth (halvfemte) = 4.5

          And so on. You might notice that I sometimes write it like “halvfemte” and other times “halvfems”. The latter is just the way it was spelled when used in a combined word (another fun quirk in Danish that we inherited from Germanic this time!). 90 is today spelled just “halvfems”.

      • VonReposti@feddit.dk
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        No, we use the same numeral symbols as everyone else. We just pronounce it in the most unintuitive manner possible.

        I can imagine that we once had symbols representing the base 20 system but standardised at some point to decimal symbols. I though haven’t encountered any piece of history to back that up.

    • Skvlp@lemm.ee
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      (5-0,5)x20 = 4,5x20 = 90? 2+((5-0,5)x20) = 2+(4,5x20) = 2 + 90 = 92?

      • VonReposti@feddit.dk
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        • Half to the five = (5-0.5) = 4.5
        • “Sindstyve” = multiplied by 20
        • 4.5*20
        • Two and half to the five multiplied by twenty = 2+(5-0.5)*20 = 2+4.5*20 = 2+90 = 92
          • VonReposti@feddit.dk
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            Yeah, it’s kinda the difference between saying “the clock is currently half past twelve” (the English way) and “the clock is currently half to one” (which we say in Danish and probably in a wealth of non-English languages too).

  • StThicket@reddthat.com
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    Norway used to count like the Germans, but switched after the introduction of the telephone. There were simply too many mistakes when telling the numbers to the operators, that a change was mandated.

    Old people might still use the 2+90 variant though, but it is not very common.

    • dcat@lemmy.world
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      17 hours ago

      to everyone who reads this dudes comment and starts imagining 75 year old grandmas saying it: i’m 30 and say 2+90, and it’s still very much a thing.