"no" banana to Lemmy Shitpost@lemmy.world • edit-210 days agoSomething's rotten in Denmarklemmy.worldimagemessage-square175fedilinkarrow-up1687arrow-down15
arrow-up1682arrow-down1imageSomething's rotten in Denmarklemmy.world"no" banana to Lemmy Shitpost@lemmy.world • edit-210 days agomessage-square175fedilink
minus-square"no" bananaOPlinkfedilink9•edit-210 days agoThat makes perfect sense to me though. In Swedish we’d say fem i halv fyra. Five minutes to half four. But in English half four would be short for half past four. I guess. Counting like the Danish, however, that is an abomination.
minus-square@frank@sopuli.xyzlinkfedilink2•10 days agoWhat’s wrong with “25 over 3?” I see the need for half 4 by itself but things being relative to that is so weird to me
minus-square"no" bananaOPlinkfedilink2•edit-210 days agoWell, it’s interesting because that would be the case with 15:20. That’d be tjugo över tre (twenty past three). But specifically 15:25 would be fem i halv fyra (five to half four). 15:35 is fem över halv fyra (five past half four). And then 15:40 is tjugo i fyra (twenty to four). So :25 and :35 are weird edge cases.
minus-square@vandsjov@feddit.dklinkfedilink1•10 days agoAgree - even “3 25” would be perfectly normal.
That makes perfect sense to me though. In Swedish we’d say fem i halv fyra. Five minutes to half four.
But in English half four would be short for half past four. I guess.
Counting like the Danish, however, that is an abomination.
What’s wrong with “25 over 3?” I see the need for half 4 by itself but things being relative to that is so weird to me
Well, it’s interesting because that would be the case with 15:20. That’d be tjugo över tre (twenty past three). But specifically 15:25 would be fem i halv fyra (five to half four). 15:35 is fem över halv fyra (five past half four).
And then 15:40 is tjugo i fyra (twenty to four).
So :25 and :35 are weird edge cases.
Agree - even “3 25” would be perfectly normal.
Man 3:25 is right there