Jerry,

 

Two things:

 

1) Please do Han the courtesy of assuming that is command of Dutch is better
than yours - the ".nl" at the end of his e-mail address suggests to me that
Dutch is probably his mother tongue.  

 

2) I can vouch for the fact that the word "duim" means both "thumb" and
"inch" in both Dutch and Afrikaans (I speak both languages).  In English,
the word "foot" can either be part of the human anatomy or it can be a unit
of measure.  In Dutch and in Afrikaans, both the words "voet" and "duim" are
units of measure and are also parts of the human anatomy. 

  _____  

From: owner-u...@colostate.edu [mailto:owner-u...@colostate.edu] On Behalf
Of Jeremiah MacGregor
Sent: 05 April 2009 14:28
To: U.S. Metric Association
Subject: [USMA:44374] RE: Reasoable Language (was Metrication US)

 

. snip

 

Doesn't the word "Duimstok" literally mean "thumb stick"?  A thumb and an
inch are not really they same thing, even if they are close.  

 

. snip

 

Jerry  

 

  _____  

From: Han Maenen <han.mae...@orange.nl>
To: U.S. Metric Association <usma@colostate.edu>
Sent: Sunday, April 5, 2009 5:54:11 AM
Subject: [USMA:44369] RE: Reasoable Language (was Metrication US)

I agree with Bll Potts. Leave expressions like 'inch by inch' or 'not an
inch' alone. Those opposed to metric would love it if we wanted to change
such things.

In the Netherlands a folding measuring stick is called a 'duimstok', which
is 'inch stick' in English. I have a wooden duimstok or inch stick with
centimetres only on it. I just avoid measuring instruments with dual units
like the plague.

 

Just west of of Dublin is the suburb Inchicore, how lunatic it would be to
change that to 2.54cmcore, or Sixmilebridge near Limerick to '9.6
km-Bridge'. Of course, the distance to Sixmilebridge is always given in km
on road signs: 'Sixmilebridge 10 km'. There is a small place in Ireland
called Inch.

 

And people in metric countries should never give an inch to Imperial and/or
U.S. Customary in their own environment. That would be very beneficial to
metrication.

 

Han

 

----- Original Message ----- 

From: Bill Potts <mailto:w...@wfpconsulting.com>  

To: U.S. Metric Association <mailto:usma@colostate.edu>  

Sent: Monday, 2009, March 30 22:30

Subject: [USMA:44234] RE: Reasonable Language (was Metrication US)

 

Pat and John:

 

For years, some of us on this list have tried to be reassuring to the
metrication-averse and to also counter some of the stranger statements made
by the more virulent opponents of metrication.

 

<snip>

 

 

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