Rainer & other linguaphiles--

   I find it interesting that different languages have different
   "breakpoints" in the teens: Spanish between 15 and 16 (quince,
   dieciseis), Italian 16 and 17 (seidici, diciassette), English 12 and 13
   (twelve, thirteen)--the ones I know.  What's that about?

   Leonard Williams
   -----Original Message-----
   From: Rainer <[email protected]>
   To: Lute net <[email protected]>
   Sent: Mon, Jan 29, 2018 4:38 am
   Subject: [LUTE] four and twenty
   A clarification:
   I always thought that there must have been (sort of) an official
   reform.
   At least teachers must have a common opinion what to teach children.
   Apparently there was none in England.
   In Germany from time to time "mathematicians" propose to change the
   German system since the current system makes learning Math hard for the
   children.
   Of course, this has nothing to do with mathematics :)
   I guess such a reform (in Germany) would be very confusing for several
   decades.
   Switching from shillings and pennies to 100 pence per pound must have
   been hard.
   Do many people still think in yards, miles, pints, ...?
   Cheers,
   Rainer
   PS
   A new standard kilogram will probably come soon.
   PPS
   Coming back to lute matters: most people describe string tensions in
   terms of Kg which is plain nonsense since Kg is the unit of matter.
   What should be used is Kilopond which is equal to the magnitude of the
   force exerted by one kilogram of mass in a 9.80665 m/s2 gravitational
   field.
   However, officially kilopond should not be used any more (since c1980).
   I still prefer to talk about a tension of 3 Kilopond instead of 29.4
   Newton :)
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References

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