• ichwillhierraus@feddit.org
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    2 days ago

    It is not so bad. They just have systems based in 20, not 10.

    Thus, 80 is four 20s (same way you would say ‘forty’ that is basically 'four tens").

    So 4.5 x 20 makes sense.also, they dont say the “20”, it is understood.

    Then a second level:

    0.5 you sometimes think “halve one”, and not “halve over cero”.

    Same way, in germanic languages they continue, so 4.5 is indeed "halve five’. See?

    So to say 92, danish they say “two and halve five”.

    Makes sense.

    • LaLuzDelSol@lemmy.world
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      2 days ago

      Uh kind of. But when people in English say half of one, they mean the number (1 in this case) divided by 2. Not 0.5 less. So half of 5 is 2.5 not 4.5.

      I do feel like if you’re going to use 20 as your base, you should commit to it and say 80+12. If you’re going to include fractions like 0.5, just commit to base 10 and say nine and 2.

      But either way it’s kind of cool and unique :)

    • Dharma Curious (he/him)@slrpnk.net
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      2 days ago

      I’ve realized from this thread that I have a weird way of reading multiplication that feels very antiquated. I have nothing to add to your comment or the conversation, I just felt like it fits a bit here, where you referenced the antiquated “score” counting.

      In my head, I don’t read that as “four times twenty plus ten” it’s “four by twenty plus ten”

      I have no idea where that came from, and I need to ask family members if they do it too

      • AItoothbrush@lemmy.zip
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        2 days ago

        I mean multiplication comes from the the area of a rectangle. A rectangle that is 4 by 4 has an area of 16, in other words 4 by 4 is 16. In hungarian for example thats by far the most common way of saying it. Also “4 multiplied by 4”, you can easily see how multiplied could be dropped to result in “4 by 4”.

  • qevlarr@lemmy.world
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    3 days ago

    French speaking Belgium straight up invented new words for 70, 80, 90 because even they don’t like that French bullshit

  • 0ops@piefed.zip
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    3 days ago

    France I guess I can see, “four score and twelve”. I don’t have a clue with Denmark

    • Nikko882@lemmy.world
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      3 days ago

      Danish has essentially managed to shorten “four and a half score” to what would be equivalent to saying “half to fives” in English. So it would be “two and half to fives” if we were to do the same in English. (This is also kinda similar to how the clock is read. 8:30 would be “half to nine” rather than “half past eight”, which is used in English.)

        • leftzero@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          2 days ago

          In catalan it’d be two quarters of nine, usually shortened to quarters of nine (the two, specifically, is implied). You can also add “and five” (minutes) and “minus five", so 8:20 would be a quarter and five of nine, and 8:40 three quarters minus five of nine. 8:05 would be eight and five, and 8:55 would be nine minus five.

        • absGeekNZ@lemmy.nz
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          2 days ago

          Interesting in NZ we would say half eight; for 8:30. Which when written looks really strange; but it is the shortening of half past eight. But strangely we always say quarter past eight rather than quarter eight.

          8:25 would be eight twenty five.
          8:35 would be twenty five to nine.
          8:45 would be quarter to nine, or more uncommon is just to read out eight forty five.

        • toofpic@lemmy.world
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          2 days ago

          In Russian, 5:30 is also “half of the sixth”, but I still hate the Danish numbering system (which I have to live with)

          • michael_palmer
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            2 days ago

            I’ve always found that baffling. I’ve always said 5:30 instead, or even better, 17:30.

        • mumblerfish@lemmy.world
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          2 days ago

          The hour that starts at 00:00 is the first hour of the day, hence 00:30 is half of that hour, or half [of] one. I think that makes sense. Not like the british who say half one and mean half past one.

    • binarytobis@lemmy.world
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      2 days ago

      France is “Four twenty twelve”, but if they had picked 99 it would be “four twenty ten nine”, which I always thought was funny.

    • Slashme@lemmy.world
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      2 days ago

      In French, you count from 69 to 72 like “sixty-nine, sixty-ten, sixty-eleven, sixty-twelve”. Then from 79 to 81 it goes “sixty-nineteen, four twenties, four twenties and one”. Then from 89 to 91 it goes “four twenties and nine, four twenties and ten, four twenties and eleven”.

      It’s not consistently vigesimal, though. Twenty is “vingt”*, thirty is “trente”, forty is “quarante”, fifty is “cinquante” and sixty is “soixante” - so far all normal. The only ones where they go all vigesimal on us are 70 (soixante-dix), 80 (quatre-vingts) and 90 (quatre-vingt-dix).

      *etymologically “two-tens”, if you go back beyond Latin: it’s from Proto-Indo-European *dwi(h₁)dḱm̥ti

    • Valmond@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      3 days ago

      I worked hard to get mine and my kids telephone numbers under 70, it’s half hell otherwise.

      Say 92 87 78 97:

      4 20 2 4 20 7 60 10 8 4 20 10 7

      Easy peasy right 😁, well you do get the hang of it but it’s easy to mess up somewhere in the middle, especially if you do have a real 20, 10, 4 and so on.

  • Lehmuusa@nord.pub
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    3 days ago

    The Russian and Ukrainian ones aren’t correct. They say “90” as something along the lines of “nine but hundred”.

    The tens are:

    Ten

    Two ten

    Three ten

    Sorok

    Five ten

    Six ten

    Seven ten

    Eight ten

    Nine but hundred

    (Plus, these all have contractions, but it’s easy to hear where the words stem from)

      • toofpic@lemmy.world
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        2 days ago

        Sorok is 40 sable furs tied together for easier countiing while trading, it is soooo obvious!

        • Lehmuusa@nord.pub
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          11 hours ago

          And of course, to go further into nothing making any sense:

          The Finnish language took the Russian word for sable, sóbol, and made a word of its own based off that: sopuli. But sopuli doesn’t mean sable. It means lemming. Somebody got confused. Later they heard about sable and named it soopeli in Finnish.

  • michael_palmer
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    2 days ago

    Slovenia is the only slavic country using German system. I was super confused shopping there. 42,41 sounds like “one and fourty and two and fourty”

  • pianoplant@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    Another interesting one is how Japan counts big numbers. There’s a word/character for 10,000 (万 man) and large numbers are multiples of that. So a million is 100x10,000 for instance.

    • Stamau123@lemmy.world
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      2 days ago

      Denmark. They have a weird base 20 multiplication counting system. 90: halvfems (half fifth times 20, i.e., 4.5 × 20) so 92 would be tooghalvfems (2 + 4.5×20)