When people talk they speak in the 12 hour clock, but written communication is in 24hr
Shitty Ask Lemmy
its like r/shittyaskreddit except its lemmy
(in German) Both formats are commonly used in both cases.
Wait till you hear how Japan does things. If something closes at 1a or 2a, quite often the signage says 2500 or 2600 instead of 0100 or 0200 to denote that it’s a holdover from the previous day.
Back in the day I used this hack the first time I implemented a scheduling system. Made the math a ton easier.
Wait, but then what time does it roll over into the new day at? Does it go 29:00 -> 06:00?
It’s not an “official” thing and usually rolls over based on the business.
So let’s say one business opens at 10a and closes at 4a every day, they’ll say 10:00-28:00
But let’s say a different company opens at 3a and closes at 10p, they’ll say 03:00-22:00
You’ll notice that there isn’t an “official” reset of time, it’s only used when a business carries over past midnight till whenever they close the next day. You don’t really find anything going past about 4a though.
Oh I see
Depends. Some people will say "21 Uhr", some people will say "9 Uhr", one isn't more formal than the other.
Of course with the 12h format you always need additional context to know if you mean in the moring or in the evening, since we don't use "am/pm".
I always prefer 24 uhr ;) format and usually set my devices to it, but I feel it is too formal to tell a friend, "hey, I will call you at 1700 hours"
Yeah, I've had a couple of Americans ask me why I use "military time", which was confusing at first. But at least in German it's totally normal.
24 uhr
That's actually not a thing. It goes from 23:59 to 00:00
And when you'd say it it would be "23 Uhr 59" to "0 Uhr".
I meant to say 24 hour format there
Instead of 9pm I would say 21 o'clock (or in German 21 Uhr), if it is obvious I'm talking about the evening, I might also say 9 o'clock (9 Uhr)
If you really want to have fun with spoken German time formats, you have to get into the quarters though.
For example:
8:15 / 20:15 can be said as Viertel nach Acht (quarter past eight) or Viertel Neun (quarter nine)
8:45 / 20:45 can be said as Viertel vor Neun (quarter before nine) or Dreiviertel Neun (three quarters nine)
And I think the difference in those is regional, so those are actually more "controversial" then using 12 or 24h formats.
As a native English speaker that used to be able to speak decent German, the one that really screwed with me was 30 minutes past/to the hour. In British English (apparently, an American girlfriend found this confusing when I said it), you can just say "half eight" and everyone knows you mean half past eight. In German, "halb acht" would be 7:30, because it's assumed to be half to instead of past. Neither is more reasonable than the other, but it definitely took me a while to get over the instinctual understanding of it. I was very late to at least one lunch
As an American, the first time I heard this usage by a British person, I assumed it meant half an hour before the hour (7:30, in your example).
Context makes it obvious. On the rare occations when it doesn't, I usually add "in the evening" or "in the morning"
The French say "14 heur". It's no biggie.
I read it as 14 removed and idk what the french say, imma pronounce it that way.