For the life of me – and no matter how many times I’ve looked it up over the years – I cannot accurately guesstimate what the metric system equals in the Americcun sistem.
When I was in third/fourth grade the big push was to teach kids the metric system because the change was* imminent* (1970s). Well, it didn’t happen and around fifth grade we were back to feet, yards, miles, quarts, gallons . . .
The safety bar is there so you can’t leave the lawnmower running unattended, lose control of it or otherwise need to stop the blade quickly. Also to prevent it from accidently starting or even just doing something dumb like putting your hand into the guard to clear an obstruction while the engine’s running.
Yeah. As soon as you ask them what the capital of Newfoundland is, the answer to the first question hits them. It’s really a kind of ‘gotcha’ thing, except they actually do not recognize that the capital of Labrador is St. John’s.
When I need to run mine out of gas at the end of the season, I just put a cable tie around the safety bar and handle so it stays running and I can go do other things until it runs out of gas.
It’s not exact, but a rule of thumb I use for converting kilometers to miles is to divide by 2, then add 10% of the original number. For example, 100 kilometers divided by 2 is 50, then plus 10% or 10 equals 60 miles. In fact, it’s more like 62 and some change, but close enough for government work.
Not necessarily. There are many items that the hot water, and worse, hot drying, will destroy without any help from harsh detergent. Putting a wooden spoon, cutting board or wooden handled knife through a dishwasher, even with no soap, will destroy it in no time.
Also putting good kitchen knives in the dishwasher can really shorten their lives. In this case it is a purely physical damage. You put all the utensils together and then the high pressure spray rattles then against each other for 30 minutes to an hour at a time. After a few treatments of this a knife can be practically beyond repair. It takes a serious resharpening and not just a few strokes with a steel.
I’ve come close to being mutilated by my mower: mowing on a slope, I have slipped, and the mower could’ve (but never did) run over my foot. With the safety bar, the blade would stop and I’d be bruised, but whole (if the mower hit me, which it never did–slipping only gave me a slightly twisted ankle). With a spinning blade, there would be blood on the outside of me. I prefer my blood to be inside.
There have also been mowers with plastic blades, but they apparently didn’t work too well, or else they’d have caught on.
I took a minor poll and was truly amazed at the number of people who didn’t know that flour was ground grain, most often wheat. They had no clue as to the origin. How could you not know that?
Well, that’s the same thing, of course. But some people find it easier to divide by two and add 10%. That’s the mental math I would do, myself. Back when the standard of tipping was 15%, I’d do something similar: move the decimal place over one space, and add half of that number to it. If it’s easier for you to multiply something by 0.6 in your head, great! Do that.
My rule of thumb: In “college-educated person”, the “educated” describes the person, but “college” modifies “educated” – not the person directly. So it is hyphenated.
Contrast “smelly educated person”. Both “smelly” and “educated” modify “person” directly, so no hyphen.
I.e. a “smelly educated person” is an “educated person” who is also a “smelly person”. But a “college-educated person” is not an “educated person” who is also a “college person”.
Some people find it easier to divide by two and add 10%? Really? Sure, our brains don’t all work the same way, and I certainly can use that method (like you, I have for tips), but multiplying by point six is like a no-brainer; you multiply by 6, and (obviously) shift the decimal point. What could be easier than that?
Donald Trump is married to a woman who lived the first 23yrs of her life as a Communist, as an ideological enemy of the United States. Now he wants us to make her our First Lady.
(Dropped this bomb on an old couple, talking politics. Closed with “makes being a mere Democrat as American as apple pies and ice cream”)
I’m puzzled by this. It is elementary standard practice in navigation to orient the map so that north on the map points north, with the map is held horizontally. In other words, so that right/left on the map is oriented to right/left on the ground. The fact that (on a printed map) text may not be upright is of little consequence relative to the fact that landmarks may be identified in their natural positions without constant mental rotation.
I can understand that many people do not orient their maps to the ground when driving, because the “landmarks” are usually just intersections, and the mental rotation is not difficult; keeping the text upright may be more important. But it’s certainly not true that “truly adept map-practitioners” fail to orient their maps to the ground. Any trained pilot or experienced cross-country hiker will always orient his map to the ground through force of (good) habit.
Not that I’ve noticed. They seem to stop spinning pretty quickly once the motors off but I wouldn’t think they’d meet the 2 second rule. You basically down throttle to below idle to turn it off and the motor conks. Takes a few seconds to conk then a few more for the blades to come to a halt.