How do YOU pronounce 2002?
Just got to thinking about this tonight. I've been watching TechTV a little the past few days, and they're all pronouncing it "twenty-oh-two".
It sounds funny to me, everyone I know (and I'm sure everyone I've heard on TV so far) just calls it plain old "two-thousand-and-two".
How do you guys say it?
It sounds funny to me, everyone I know (and I'm sure everyone I've heard on TV so far) just calls it plain old "two-thousand-and-two".
How do you guys say it?
Comments
but I'm sure I'll just pronounce it "this year" when the time comes until then how about "two hundred juxtaposed to a two"
edit- I wrote juxtaposed to a one
[ 12-28-2001: Message edited by: Wrong Robot ]</p>
What I'm wondering is: what do we call this decade? The "oh's"? The tens? Come to think of it, I can't think of how anyone says the first decade of the 1900's (1900-1910) either. The closest I can think of is "the turn of the century."
One thousand nine hundred eighty three? Nope. Nineteen eighty three.
I'd call this decade the twenty hundreds.
[ 12-28-2001: Message edited by: Nick ]</p>
The real question is the decade.
You had the
70's or senveties
80's or eighties
90's or ninties etc
what are we in now? The 00's or zeros?
The new millenium is too long. In ten years would we be in the teens?
[ 12-28-2001: Message edited by: Odinn5 ]</p>
Y2K
2K1
2K2
2K3
2K4
...so on and so forth.
As for the decade.....
Decade 1
....I just made it up but it sounds cool and think, when I am old and grey it will sound like a cool thing to have been around in DECADE 1!
<strong>I say two-thousand two. No "and" either.
What I'm wondering is: what do we call this decade? The "oh's"? The tens? Come to think of it, I can't think of how anyone says the first decade of the 1900's (1900-1910) either. The closest I can think of is "the turn of the century."</strong><hr></blockquote>
we SHOULD call it the OTs
spread the word
"When *I* was just leaving college in twenty-OT-two, we still had to touch the computer to make it work. Oooooooh, we had crude software that you could talk to and it'd type out stuff for you, but most of the time we used a thing called a keyboard, and another called a mouse.
"See this keyboard had little buttons for each letter of the alphabet -- the old alphabet (indulging here) -- and a great many people used both hands in punching out words into the computer. We'd also use that mouse thing to point a little arrow on the screen -- I'll tell you about those screens in a minute -- and click on little pictures called ICONS.
"Now this here screen wasn't like them new-fangled 3-dimensional holo-displays like you have now. Noooooo, they were '2-D' and were limited to millions of colors. Worst thing was the older models used to shoot electrons onto a sheet of glass to get a picture. Nasty, really.
"That was a dark time in computer history, too. There was all this competition and discussion about processor chips. See, we hadn't figured out Linear Optical Induction yet (again, indulging), so computer makers kept coming out with these faster and faster chips that would ultimately reach a stopping point in upgrade potential. What was the one that Apple used...oh yes, the G5. Darned lot of discussion about that before it came out -- I'll tell you about that another time so as not to bore you, boy.
"But the kicker, is there used to be this distinction among computers. See, when the personal computer was just getting going, there was this company called Microsoft. After a while, people got sick of their operating systems shutting down, locking up, and just being crappy all the time. Meanwhile, Apple Computer was developing the 'next generation operating system' that everything's based on today. 'Course, that was when it was still version 10. Now, they're up to what, 47? Anyhoo, wow...Microsoft. I darned near forgot they ever existed after the government disbanned them...."
We could only hope.
[ 12-29-2001: Message edited by: CosmoNut ]</p>
- Pook
<strong>Explaining to my grandchildren:
::SNIP::
</strong><hr></blockquote>
bah... I remember the days when we used G3's. AND WE LIKED THEM!
The decade thing... Some like "hundreds" but I like "oughts". Hundreds following 90s implies a continuation, not a new beginning. Thus, oughts seems more appropriate to me, 'cause it's more like you're starting over. The next one would be the tens.
Now there is an apparent contradiction above. But it's not really. The decade of the 20s included 1920, but the 192nd decade started in 1921 and ended at the conclusion of 1930. Why? Just like the first one started in 1 and ended at the conclusion of 10. Ain't no year ought.
And on an earlier theme, why is it The Year 2000 or The Year 2001? Don't people figure the context will tell what you mean when using that number? Or why not just say 20 hundred or 20 oh 1? Is it The Year 1900? No; and we say it 19 hundred, not 1000 900. Step in it once, and you get in deeper the next time. <img src="graemlins/smokin.gif" border="0" alt="[Chilling]" />
Anyway, like Cosmonut and MacAgent, I say "Two Thousand Two"