It's worse when I ask people at school when their date of birth is and they say xx/xx/2009! TWO THOUSAND AND NINE, AT SECONDARY SCHOOL!
Or, the worst thing of all, when I hear that some of the kids that were in my first classes (and it was primary schools I worked at then, not secondary) now have children of their own.
One of the reasons my Dad gave for taking early retirement as a teacher is he had had people telling him he taught their Dad for years and he didnt want to still be there when someone said he had taught their granddad
It made sense in the past when they didn't have tape measures but whats the point of having to learn it all new now?
Our currency was decimalised in 1971, all food labelling is in grammes, petrol is in litres and until a few years ago the OS benchmarks were in 'decimalised feet' (how weird is that) and that started in the 19th century. Get used to it mate and don't be a dinosaur. We should be going forwards looking where we're going, not where we've been.
not that I've ever bought one but do they still buy and sell horses in guineas? I like old maps with height contours noted in feet -
Oh I’m quite capable of looking forwards AND backwards and have criss-crossed Europe so many times in my life that I’m used to converting currencies/distances/speeds/weights etc etc as necessity demands. I can do conversions in my head as well, so senility is still a long way off! It was a light hearted comment that I made at the start of this but I now realise, not for the first time, that I would have been better off just saying nothing at all. Bit sad really, but never mind ........
I started school with pre decimal currency and imperial measurement. I’m completely metric other than my height and weight, then obviously miles (I still have to convert I’m in my head)
When I worked at Stocksbridge steels as a student, we measured things in gnats. Is that still not a thing?
I'm mostly metric but some other things I am still imperial eg golf where I can only think in yards not metres and when fell walking in the UK I think in miles and feet, though if I am in the Alps I think of heights in metres (or meters if the OP would prefer) and distances in km same goes for cooking a lot of the recipies I got from my mum are in ounces and fluid ounces but most cook books are in grams and ml Basically I am all mixed up between the 2 systems but its not usually a problem The one I have never understood is Tyre sizes which always mix inches for the diameter eg R17 means 17 inches but the width eg 245 is in mm
Always liked the black midget gems. Black Midget Gems Matter. Now that is a slogan that includes race, genetics and "spice" as we called it then.