equinox...

Mar 08, 2007 15:00

So, my mom had an emergency preparedness neighborhood meeting where, among other things, they discussed changing your smoke detector batteries, and how the suggestion used to be to do it at the time change, but that was getting lopsided now. So she said she planned to do hers at the equinoxes, and got a roomful of blank stares ( Read more... )

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Comments 21

pers March 8 2007, 23:12:02 UTC
I don't consider myself any of those things and I know what an equinox is! hhe

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faecat March 8 2007, 23:21:57 UTC
is the time change THAT lopsided now?

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rmd March 8 2007, 23:54:31 UTC
no. unless your smoke detector is in the kitchen and doubling as a fried food detector, the batteries are probably good for close to two years, at least. and, in fact, most smoke detectors will start to beep plaintively when the battery is low.

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emmacrew March 9 2007, 00:01:50 UTC
It's more like 5-7 than 6-6, but probably not so lopsided as to be a problem for batteries. It's this weekend, egad!

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frog_lady March 8 2007, 23:22:23 UTC
I will grant that I'm both a science geek and a vocabulary nut, but I would think they'd have to be people who'd never looked at calendars.

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greyaenigma March 8 2007, 23:26:34 UTC
I think it'd be pretty easy to miss when the equinoxi happen. I never remember when they are, myself. (I can't even keep track of when the time changes are, and those require you to do something.

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emmacrew March 9 2007, 00:02:40 UTC
True enough, but at least you know what the word means...

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greyaenigma March 9 2007, 00:04:20 UTC
A rudimentary grasp of latin does help.

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dougo March 9 2007, 02:23:38 UTC
Not enough, apparently: it's equinoctes in Latin, not equinoxi.

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tchemgrrl March 9 2007, 00:11:34 UTC
I'll admit that if I don't have a second to remember word roots I mix up "equinox" and "solstice", but heavens, I still know what it MEANS, and can't think of anyone I know besides non-native speakers that wouldn't.

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boojum March 9 2007, 00:26:58 UTC
My ninth-grade science teacher insisted that "solstice" meant the longest day and "equinox" meant the shortest day. Marked me down for giving the right definitions, too. I didn't like her. (Unfortunately, I wasn't clueful enough to get the dictionary or any other reference; I was too hung up on The Truth to think much about the communication.)

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greyaenigma March 9 2007, 00:30:22 UTC
Oooooh, I hate those sorts of teachers.

(I have to stop and think about the difference between solstice and equinox myself.)

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emmacrew March 9 2007, 00:32:59 UTC
Nice. I suspect she might have backed down if proven wrong with the dictionary but held it against you in other ways.

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