The tradition (not always followed) is for clock faces with Roman numerals to use IIII instead of IV. This helps keep people from misreading the sequence “VI V IV” as is appears at the bottom of the dial. (I once played a hidden-object mystery game in which the programmer-artist had mistakenly painted “VI V VI”, showing that such mistakes can happen.)
When I was in the 5th grade (1960) I didn’t know how to tell time, because I didn’t need to. Mom got me up in the morning, school bells told me what to do when, etc. Teacher said I need to learn, so I was sat down at home next to the Grandfather clock and waited for it to ding dong. Hey, it’s 3 o’clock! Okay, I did finally learn.
Without movement there is no time. Time is the measure of movement over distance. Without movement there no distance. That’s why it makes no sense to talk about outside the universe or before the Big Bang.
pschearer Premium Member 8 months ago
The tradition (not always followed) is for clock faces with Roman numerals to use IIII instead of IV. This helps keep people from misreading the sequence “VI V IV” as is appears at the bottom of the dial. (I once played a hidden-object mystery game in which the programmer-artist had mistakenly painted “VI V VI”, showing that such mistakes can happen.)
NeedaChuckle Premium Member 8 months ago
The Time Lords!!
exness Premium Member 8 months ago
When I was in the 5th grade (1960) I didn’t know how to tell time, because I didn’t need to. Mom got me up in the morning, school bells told me what to do when, etc. Teacher said I need to learn, so I was sat down at home next to the Grandfather clock and waited for it to ding dong. Hey, it’s 3 o’clock! Okay, I did finally learn.
Just-me 8 months ago
To me, a lot of the old mantle clocks are works of art.
walt1968pat Premium Member 8 months ago
Kind of like cursive.
poppacapsmokeblower 8 months ago
Without movement there is no time. Time is the measure of movement over distance. Without movement there no distance. That’s why it makes no sense to talk about outside the universe or before the Big Bang.
snowedin, now known as Missy's mom 8 months ago
Mr. Cravens, I don’t know how you do it, but you capture kids’ way of thinking pretty clearly. Bravo!
Mike Baldwin creator 8 months ago
Strangely enough, it was always Now.
cuzinron47 8 months ago
This is also why we write in cursive, to keep secrets from you.
sincavage05 8 months ago
Scary world. The technology is so amazing.
Deja Moo 8 months ago
It all started with sundials; the shadow points to the time.
MVMartinek 8 months ago
With an old-fashioned (meaning, analog) clock, you can easily tell “how long until”. At least, approximately. “It’s almost 4, time for my show!”
With a digital clock, you have to be able to subtract to know “how long until”.