This is so easy to get right...or wrong...

Page may contain affiliate links. Please see terms for details.

Oxo

Guru
Location
Cumbria
What's the posh term for punnet or chips then? An overseas guy asked me to explain "dinner time" to him and how it differed from lunch. He was confused when I explained that if you had "dinner" in the evening rather than at dinner time it became "tea"
High tea, that would really have got him going.
 

swee'pea99

Squire
What's the posh term for punnet or chips then? An overseas guy asked me to explain "dinner time" to him and how it differed from lunch. He was confused when I explained that if you had "dinner" in the evening rather than at dinner time it became "tea"
Dinner is not tea, whenever it is taken. It is dinner. Tea is tea. And lunch, for that matter, is lunch. Do try not to confuse overseas guys. They find our ways baffling enough as it is.
 

srw

It's a bit more complicated than that...
I had never heard of BODMAS until last night. Does that explain my D grade?
I don't remember hearing about BODMAS until well after I'd graduated. By then (actually well before then) I'd learned that subtraction is just addition of negative numbers, multiplication is just repeated addition, division is just multiplication by the reciprocal and raising to a power is just repeated multiplication.

Again - abstraction. It's a better thing to teach than blind application of a rule that doesn't even work.
 

Profpointy

Legendary Member
I don't remember hearing about BODMAS until well after I'd graduated. By then (actually well before then) I'd learned that subtraction is just addition of negative numbers, multiplication is just repeated addition, division is just multiplication by the reciprocal and raising to a power is just repeated multiplication.

Again - abstraction. It's a better thing to teach than blind application of a rule that doesn't even work.

So without the rule that you do multiplications before additions you'll get the wrong answer. You can't get the rule simply by abstracting; the rule is just what's been agreed.
 

nickyboy

Norven Mankey
What's the posh term for punnet or chips then? An overseas guy asked me to explain "dinner time" to him and how it differed from lunch. He was confused when I explained that if you had "dinner" in the evening rather than at dinner time it became "tea"

Where I come from, your punnets are for strawberries, grapes and other soft fruits. Chips, are served in bags (old skool), cones and I would call the thing you get Maccy D fries in a carton or, being generic, a container.

Punnet sounds overly posh
 
U

User482

Guest
Dinner is not tea, whenever it is taken. It is dinner. Tea is tea. And lunch, for that matter, is lunch. Do try not to confuse overseas guys. They find our ways baffling enough as it is.

I strongly suspect that most of your fellow Boltonians would disagree with you.
 

srw

It's a bit more complicated than that...
So without the rule that you do multiplications before additions you'll get the wrong answer. You can't get the rule simply by abstracting; the rule is just what's been agreed.
One of the abstract axioms of field algebra is that multiplication is distributive over addition. So yes, that's just abstraction too.
 

Profpointy

Legendary Member
One of the abstract axioms of field algebra is that multiplication is distributive over addition. So yes, that's just abstraction too.

so why is it an "abstraction" rather than merely a rule?

genuine question - maybe "abstraction" has a more technical meaning in esoteric algebra. I was more of an analysis man back in the day.
 

srw

It's a bit more complicated than that...
so why is it an "abstraction" rather than merely a rule?

genuine question - maybe "abstraction" has a more technical meaning in esoteric algebra. I was more of an analysis man back in the day.
I mean that the concept of a field (an algebra with two operations corresponding to multiplication and addition in arithmetic) is an abstraction of arithmetic.

And I suppose if you know that multiplication is repeated addition it doesn't make sense to do the addition first.
 

srw

It's a bit more complicated than that...
Who knew that people gave such a toss* about cartoon drawings of fast food and some symbols?

*I got it right, just in case anyone has forgotten.
I prefer a cartoon drawing of slow food.

33185.jpg



Mmmmmm.... venison.
 

Profpointy

Legendary Member
I mean that the concept of a field (an algebra with two operations corresponding to multiplication and addition in arithmetic) is an abstraction of arithmetic.

And I suppose if you know that multiplication is repeated addition it doesn't make sense to do the addition first.

I like the last bit. It's a better explanation than my usual justifiaction for Bodmas "because it's the rule". It makes no sense otherwise.
 
Top Bottom