A horse that lives for a year is a yearling.
So a horse that lives for a week, is that a weakling?
If that's all the time it lives for, then yes, obviously.
A horse that lives for a year is a yearling.
So a horse that lives for a week, is that a weakling?
A horse that lives for a year is a yearling.
So a horse that lives for a week, is that a weakling?
If that's all the time it lives for, then yes, obviously.
16 Ounces in a pound and 14 pounds in a stone comes from the International Wool trade in the middle ages
Can you get imperial calculators now?
Imagine the problems in adding 12 shillings fourpence ha'ppeny to eight and six. Or six feet 7 inches to 8 feet 11 and a quarter inches using a normal calculator or phone calculator.
In the same way he used the story about making cardboard buses to influence search engine results away from him standing in front of the Brexit bus, and Rees-Mogg slouched in Parliament to manipulate search engine results about himself lying in Parliament and elsewhere, I wonder if this announcement is to somehow change search engine results about the partying in Downing Street. Imperial units for alcoholic drinks being dominant in stories about Johnson instead of alcoholic drinks in his house or something (he's already said he's going to re-introduce the crown symbol to beer pint glasses, which seems like a similar tactic).
But why 16 and 14? And why the word stone?
In the 15th Century, Calais had the monopoly on wool exports from England so they used to take full advantage - they ruled that bundles of wool from England did not have to be unpacked, so many contained large rocks and stones to make up the weight, so I would like to think it comes from that but I doubt it! Stone obviously comes from an actual stone, but I wonder who decided which stone to use? Was there a master stone that everyone had to use?! Perhaps someone smashed it and it broke into 14 pieces? Who knows.
But given Johnson wants to reset the UK to 1965 or earlier, this will have to be done by mental arithmetic.
Been using both for several years quite happily, I see no downside to having more visibility of both so all generations can understand. Most people measure height and weight in imperial, and also distance in miles rather than Km so it is important that the next generation understand this too.
Can you get imperial calculators now?
Imagine the problems in adding 12 shillings fourpence ha'ppeny to eight and six. Or six feet 7 inches to 8 feet 11 and a quarter inches using a normal calculator or phone calculator.
Can you get imperial calculators now?
Imagine the problems in adding 12 shillings fourpence ha'ppeny to eight and six. Or six feet 7 inches to 8 feet 11 and a quarter inches using a normal calculator or phone calculator.
Exactly. Incredible quite how much noise this minor change has generated from the usual sides howling with disgust which probably suits the Gov't just fine.for something thats an obvious distraction pandering to a small group, its going to get a lot of people irate. ignore it. so they'll allow measurements to be in imperial alongside metric. it wont matter a button for anyone except a few market stall holders who'll be allowed to shout "paaand" again.
Pounds, shillings and pence aren't really part of this debate. We changed to new pence (100 to the pound) years before we joined the EEC, and we kept the pound sterling anyway, so there's nothing to re-introduce.We haven't quite been using both systems in tandem. We use imperial for some and metric for most others. There is no reason whatsoever to reintroduce pounds, shillings and pence other than a vanity project no doubt driven by the right honourable member for the 17th century!!!
..your mumDo we know how the poodle got on
Hoorah, another Bash Boris Brexit thread.
Led by a Guardian slant, what more could you ask for?
I quite often add up my supermarket weekly shop in my head, just for fun.My grandparents used to own a fishing tackle shop (within walking distance of that lot up the road’s ground). My grandmother used to write every transaction in a cash book. At the end of the week, she’d run a pen down the entries, just the once, not separately for each column, and write the total in the ‘total weekly takings’ box. Astonishing mental arithmetic.
A horse that lives for a year is a yearling.
So a horse that lives for a week, is that a weakling?