It's Legos in the US. Maybe I have to say it twice.No it isn't. The people who make the stuff make the rules.
It's Legos in the US. Maybe I have to say it twice.No it isn't. The people who make the stuff make the rules.
Well, OK.
You can say what you like.
I just thought you might be interested in knowing that the rest of the world don't use that word.
Yet.
I'm sure we'll all be linguistically bullied into adopting the US term in time. Better get used to it.
Please! There is no such word as "legos". It's a mass noun, like "furniture".
In the US, it's Legos.
No it isn't. The people who make the stuff make the rules.
It's Legos in the US. Maybe I have to say it twice.
That makes no sense in any way. It's not a plural (adding an 's'), it's not a contraction (where is the apostrophe) . . . . on first reading I had no idea that you might be referring to the Danish Toy - so it doesn't convey your meaning.In the US, it's Legos.
That makes no sense in any way. It's not a plural (adding an 's'), it's not a contraction (where is the apostrophe) . . . . on first reading I had no idea that you might be referring to the Danish Toy - so it doesn't convey your meaning.
I've just asked my Niece who has lived in CA for the past 20 years and has two youngsters who have some LEGO and (without any prompting from me) confirms that she has never heard the term Legos.It's been common usage here for at least 40 years. It's not even a noun, it's a brand of plastic blocks.
Fahrenheit is a strange measurement with its negative threshold based on the freezing point of water when fully saturated with salt - what was the relevance of maximum strength brine?Resistance to metric measures is the preserve mainly of the over 50s. No great surprise.
YouGov research
I would hazard a guess the average age of forum members is somewhat older than 50 - and like me have got used to converting inches to centimetres and back again.
Why only half the job was done and we still have miles, pints and gallons defeats me.
The centigrade scale has the benefit that water changes state at 0 and 100 degrees C.
Daniel Fahrenheit in in the early 1700s was succeeded by Anders Celsius in 1742 - I don't understand why it took the Brits 250 years to grasp the benefits is beyond me. Our Atlantic cousins are still working on the implications, I guess.
He‘s confused between a handbag and a purse."Swing your purse"!
There's really no need to question my masculinity!
Really, David, you make me laugh. I was feigning outrage. I don't really give a tinker's cuss how you say things. I have an American wife, three American stepdaughters, five hybrid grandchildren who can't decide if it's "tomato" or "tomato" and
about a billion American in-laws. I'm virtually bilingual.
I know. See above remarks re. American wife!!He‘s confused between a handbag and a purse.
I hope that, one day, presumably in the far distant future, the Americans will resign themselves to learning to speak ENGLISH - AS IT SHOULD BE SPOKEN !It's Legos in the US. Maybe I have to say it twice.
..... those small blocks that feel real good when you step on them in the middle of the night in bare feet.
To be fair, the Americans mangle the language in certain ways, but in other words or usages, they remain closer to old English, and the British English has evolved. British and American English spent a lot of time diverging, and now we are converging again, probably with a bias towards American.I hope that, one day, presumably in the far distant future, the Americans will resign themselves to learning to speak ENGLISH - AS IT SHOULD BE SPOKEN !
Ah well you're capitalising and that's German...I hope that, one day, presumably in the far distant future, the Americans will resign themselves to learning to speak ENGLISH - AS IT SHOULD BE SPOKEN !
I can remember in the 40s and 50s that 5 shillings were known as a dollar, and a half-crown was 'alf a dollar! A pound was a quid, and I asked my Mum why Mary didn't have a quid for a bed in the carol. ("No crib for a bed")Ha! You asked for it...
2 half pennys in a penny
3 pennys in a threepence or thrupenny bit
6 pennys in a sixpence
12 pennys in a shilling
2 shillings in a florin or 2 Bob
2 shillings and a six pence in a half crown
10 shillings in a ten bob note
20 shillings in a one pound note
5 one pound notes in a five pound note or fiver.
We still have 5, 10, 20, 50 pound notes bur one pound notes have been replaced with one pound coins and equal 100 (new) pence.
Well before 1971 we had thrupenny bits, farthings (4 = one penny)and sovereigns were one pound and a shilling which equaled one guinea.
And daft pippers like Reece-Mogg wonder why we ever changed...
I agree. Miles, gallons, feet and pounds, but Celsius for temperature. If I'm estimating a drill size, or the thickness of plywood I use mm.Fahrenheit is a strange measurement with its negative threshold based on the freezing point of water when fully saturated with salt - what was the relevance of maximum strength brine?
And why do people think it is British? the bloke, as far a I can tell, never ventured onto out shores.
But just as I am mixed up with most measurements, some situations have me thinking in Fahrenheit, Summer days for instance, my thoughts turn to ºF such as 'it is very pleasant out, 70 ish, or it was hot today we touched 85. But then if it is a cold winters day I can imagine only in centigrade, same with the measurement of any thing else, annealing point of steel, well that would be centigrade too.
Linear measurements is another mixed bag for me, walking driving cycling it has to be miles, what else could it possibly be. But small measurements, lets say under 10' then I turn to metric.
Weight, there's another confused mix up, I try to keep myself under 13stone (failing a bit at the moment) , but anything below, lets say, 4 stone, I need grams
My car gets mpg, but I fill it with litres, my beer is brewed in litres, but I consider the end product as pints.
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