> From: Brett Parker
> On Thu, Feb 03, 2005 at 09:38:05AM -0000, Keith Watson wrote:
> > > From: Brett Parker Sent: 03 February 2005 08:10
> > > On Wed, Feb 02, 2005 at 02:44:16PM +0000, Paul wrote:
> > > >
> > > > Speak for yourself - I'm living the American Dream for a month...
> > > > Glorious sunshine, temperatures up in the 70's...
> > >
> > > Paul, I know you in merka, but can you speak in an english tongue and
> > > use celcius instead of fahrenheit, 70 celcius is "rather warm" so I'm
> > > assuming you're in fahrenheit and mean 21.1C ;)
> >
> > Speak for yourself Brett, as far as I'm concerned
> fahrenheit is English and celcius/centigrade is "foreign muck". 70's works for me! :o)
>
> It's Swedish [1], admittedly, but given that Fahrenheit[2] is a German
> invention, they're both foreign... Get with the programme, damn you ;)
>
Well? English is a (sort of) German dialect and our current sovereign's family also originally hails from that part of the world. So traditionally we English have always had a penchant for things German, anyway it was good enough for my grandparents, it's good enough for me. :o)
Notwithstanding that my German acquaintances all use SI units (e.g. metres, litres, Celsius, etc.).
> Apparently we're supposed to work in SI units, next to go on the list is
> Miles, but hey, that can wait for a bit, there's far too many signs to
> change for that ;)
Yeah, depressing isn't it?
<nostalgia-alert>If you ask me the rot set in when we dispensed with good old shillings and pence.</nostalgia-alert>
Regards,
Keith
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ABSURDITY, n. - A statement or belief manifestly inconsistent with one's own opinion. - Ambrose Bierce - The Devil's Dictionary