But then, so did the Russians: сутки.
The Greek word, as borrowed by English, is nychthemeron, a day specifically in
the sense of 24 hours.
As opposed to counting only the sunny hours, as sundials do.
Of course, the Greek word itself looks like this: νυχθήμερον.
And, as well, the English word is an esoteric technical term, known by not one in a thousand, whereas "sutki" is a word of the ordinary common Russian language.
John Savard
But then, so did the Russians: сутки.
The Greek word, as borrowed by English, is nychthemeron, a day specifically in
the sense of 24 hours.
As opposed to counting only the sunny hours, as sundials do.
Of course, the Greek word itself looks like this: νυχθήμερον.
And, as well, the English word is an esoteric technical term, known by not one in a thousand, whereas "sutki" is a word of the ordinary common Russian language.
On Friday, January 21, 2022 at 11:11:27 PM UTC-7, Quadibloc wrote:
But then, so did the Russians: сутки.And in Yiddish, the word is:
The Greek word, as borrowed by English, is nychthemeron, a day specifically in
the sense of 24 hours.
As opposed to counting only the sunny hours, as sundials do.
Of course, the Greek word itself looks like this: νυχθήμερον. And, as well, the English word is an esoteric technical term, known by not one in a thousand, whereas "sutki" is a word of the ordinary common Russian
language.
מֵעֵת לְעֵת
or "mesles", while in German, the word is Etmal.
John Savard
But then, so did the Russians: сутки.
The Greek word, as borrowed by English, is nychthemeron, a day specifically in
the sense of 24 hours.
As opposed to counting only the sunny hours, as sundials do.
Of course, the Greek word itself looks like this: νυχθήμερον.
And, as well, the English word is an esoteric technical term, known by not one in a thousand, whereas "sutki" is a word of the ordinary common Russian language.
John Savard
On Saturday, January 22, 2022 at 6:11:27 AM UTC, Quadibloc wrote:
But then, so did the Russians: сутки.
The Greek word, as borrowed by English, is nychthemeron, a day specifically in
the sense of 24 hours.
As opposed to counting only the sunny hours, as sundials do.
Of course, the Greek word itself looks like this: νυχθήμερον.
And, as well, the English word is an esoteric technical term, known by not >> one in a thousand, whereas "sutki" is a word of the ordinary common Russian >> language.
John Savard
My goodness, how did things come to this?
Does the English language really not have a word for it? A
bit surprising (we in Dutch call it 'etmaal', almost the same
as it is in German, and a pretty normal word to use).
Or is this about the difference between a siderial day and
a solar day?
On Saturday, January 22, 2022 at 12:40:40 PM UTC-8, Jos Bergervoet wrote:
Or is this about the difference between a siderial day and
a solar day?
Unfortunately, Gerald Kelleher does not acknowledge that a sidereal day is a real thing. In this regard, of course, he is completely incorrect... but there you have it.
On Saturday, January 22, 2022 at 9:13:02 PM UTC-7, palsing wrote:
On Saturday, January 22, 2022 at 12:40:40 PM UTC-8, Jos Bergervoet wrote:
Or is this about the difference between a siderial day and
a solar day?
Unfortunately, Gerald Kelleher does not acknowledge that a sidereal day is a real thing. In this regard, of course, he is completely incorrect... but there you have it.
It is true that the poster Oriel36 objects to... certain uses of the sidereal day.
On Saturday, January 22, 2022 at 10:10:56 PM UTC-7, Quadibloc wrote:
On Saturday, January 22, 2022 at 10:06:25 PM UTC-7, Quadibloc wrote:
On Saturday, January 22, 2022 at 9:13:02 PM UTC-7, palsing wrote:
On Saturday, January 22, 2022 at 12:40:40 PM UTC-8, Jos Bergervoet wrote:
Or is this about the difference between a siderial day and
a solar day?
Unfortunately, Gerald Kelleher does not acknowledge that a sidereal day is a real thing. In this regard, of course, he is completely incorrect... but there you have it.
It is true that the poster Oriel36 objects to... certain uses of the sidereal day.
But he _does_ acknowledge that it exists (even if the name "sidereal day" is
not a good one, and in this, I'm not inclined to dispute his claim) - and that
it has a legitimate use as a "timekeeping convenience", i.e. it's entirely all
right with him for the clock drive on a telescope to have the period of a sidereal
day to keep it pointed at the same stars.
It's just illegitimate with him to think that this time period is a better time for the
Earth's rotation than the good old _day_ day of 24 hours.
Or, to put it another way...
He acknowledges that the "sidereal day", as it has its uses as a "timekeeping convenience", is _a_ real thing.
But it is not, according to him, the Earth's fundamental period of intrinsic rotation;
thus, it is not _the_ real thing - so for him, it can never be the pause that refreshes.
On Saturday, January 22, 2022 at 10:06:25 PM UTC-7, Quadibloc wrote:
On Saturday, January 22, 2022 at 9:13:02 PM UTC-7, palsing wrote:
On Saturday, January 22, 2022 at 12:40:40 PM UTC-8, Jos Bergervoet wrote:
Or is this about the difference between a siderial day and
a solar day?
Unfortunately, Gerald Kelleher does not acknowledge that a sidereal day is a real thing. In this regard, of course, he is completely incorrect... but there you have it.
It is true that the poster Oriel36 objects to... certain uses of the sidereal day.But he _does_ acknowledge that it exists (even if the name "sidereal day" is not a good one, and in this, I'm not inclined to dispute his claim) - and that
it has a legitimate use as a "timekeeping convenience", i.e. it's entirely all
right with him for the clock drive on a telescope to have the period of a sidereal
day to keep it pointed at the same stars.
It's just illegitimate with him to think that this time period is a better time for the
Earth's rotation than the good old _day_ day of 24 hours.
On Saturday, January 22, 2022 at 12:40:40 PM UTC-8, Jos Bergervoet wrote:
Or is this about the difference between a siderial day andUnfortunately, Gerald Kelleher does not acknowledge that a sidereal day is a real thing. In this regard, of course, he is completely incorrect... but there you have it.
a solar day?
Knock yourself out, but you will get nowhere.
Right, Gerald?
On Saturday, January 22, 2022 at 10:06:25 PM UTC-7, Quadibloc wrote:
On Saturday, January 22, 2022 at 9:13:02 PM UTC-7, palsing wrote:
On Saturday, January 22, 2022 at 12:40:40 PM UTC-8, Jos Bergervoet wrote: >>
Or is this about the difference between a siderial day and
a solar day?
Unfortunately, Gerald Kelleher does not acknowledge that a sidereal day is a real thing. In this regard, of course, he is completely incorrect... but there you have it.
It is true that the poster Oriel36 objects to... certain uses of the sidereal day.
But he _does_ acknowledge that it exists (even if the name "sidereal day" is not a good one, and in this, I'm not inclined to dispute his claim) -
On 22/01/23 6:10 AM, Quadibloc wrote:
On Saturday, January 22, 2022 at 10:06:25 PM UTC-7, Quadibloc wrote:
On Saturday, January 22, 2022 at 9:13:02 PM UTC-7, palsing wrote:
On Saturday, January 22, 2022 at 12:40:40 PM UTC-8, Jos Bergervoet wrote:
Or is this about the difference between a siderial day and
a solar day?
Unfortunately, Gerald Kelleher does not acknowledge that a sidereal day is a real thing. In this regard, of course, he is completely incorrect... but there you have it.
It is true that the poster Oriel36 objects to... certain uses of the sidereal day.
But he _does_ acknowledge that it exists (even if the name "sidereal day" isOK, "galactic day" would be better, and then "cosmological day"
not a good one, and in this, I'm not inclined to dispute his claim) -
could correct again for the galactic rotation (albeit a small
correction, we always should strive for astronomical precision!)
--
Jos
And how could I possibly have failed to include the appropriate video link:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1VM2eLhvsSM
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