
Archived topic from Anythingforums, old topic ID:3980, old post ID:69678
Do I detect jealousy? The second post in the first topic of 2010 is almost as good – almost.Bookworm wrote: Congratulations, hope it makes you feel good
Why wouldn't a new decade start with 1? 2010 is the tenth year in the first decade of the 2000's. The new decade won't start until 2011.Red Squirrel wrote: It's also the first topic of this decade.
If please, if anyone thinks a decade only starts after "1" (ex: 2011) I will shoot peanut butter in your eye and send my squirrel minions loose on you after they've sharpened their teeth on schedule 40 PVC piping!
There are actually people out there who think that.
So I suppose you don’t use phrases like “the ’60s,” or perhaps you think that that decade lasted from 1961 to 1970? A decade is simply a period of ten years and can be started arbitrarily, e.g., 1975–1984. At least in the United States, “generational decades” (the 1980s, 1990s, 2000s, etc.) are popular ways to divide history, and they always start on years divisible by ten. The 2000s began on 2000 and ended on 2009. It does not matter if that decade straddled the second and third millennia (see below). You are free to start your decades a year later (or two or three or four or whatever), but expect to be misunderstood. (And what would you call them?)Bookworm wrote: Why wouldn't a new decade start with 1? 2010 is the tenth year in the first decade of the 2000's. The new decade won't start until 2011.
(Ow, my eyes, my eyes.)
On every digital 12-hour clock I’ve seen, AM begins on 12:00:00 AM (midnight) and ends on 11:59:59 AM, and PM begins on 12:00:00 PM (noon) and ends on 11:59:59 PM. (I have never seen a 12-hour clock that displayed fractions of a second or accounted for leap seconds.) Given that PM is Latin for “after noon,” applying it to noon itself is questionable, but that is what I was taught. No moment of time is in AM and PM. However, AM/PM notation is not used much globally, and what I was taught may simply be an American convention. While I doubt anglophone Canada differs, I also doubt that 12-hour time enjoys the same standardization as 24-hour time, which is the standard for scientific and military endeavors worldwide.ycontrol wrote: Actually isn't it both? Doesn't one decade end at 2010 and also start at 2010..like AM and PM...12 midnight is the end of the PM and start of the Am...am I wrong in this?