Editing 2132: Percentage Styles
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==Explanation== | ==Explanation== | ||
− | + | {{incomplete|Created by a Classicist and a Mathematician. Please mention here why this explanation isn't complete. Do NOT delete this tag too soon.}} | |
− | The comic lists the best to worst ways in which you can write out phrases that are phonetically the same as "65%". They go from the common "65%" and "65 percent" to "65 per cent," which is not common in Randall's area and time, to the | + | The comic lists the best to worst ways in which you can write out phrases that are phonetically the same as "65%". They go from the common "65%" and "65 percent" to "65 per cent," which is not common in Randall's area and time, to the odd "sixty-five%" and "65 per¢" (using the cent currency symbol) which are not really used and look archaic. The middle option, "65 per cent", was common in older literature, along with "65 per cent.", using "cent." as an abbreviation for "centum", which is Latin for "hundred". ("per" is Latin for "through"). The entire string would translate to "65 for every hundred." "Per cent" is more widely used in British English than in American English today. |
− | + | Other abbreviations not mentioned in the comic include "pct.", "pct" or "pc".[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Percentage] | |
− | + | The title text references the ambiguity of [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hard_and_soft_C hard and soft C] in English. In Classical Latin, "C" was always pronounced like "K". However, in English, most "C"s before E and I (including "percent") are "soft", and pronounced like "S". Some students of Latin may adopt the Latin pronunciation of English words derived from Latin. Such people may pronounce "celtic" like "keltic", "caeser" like "kaiser", or "cent" like "kent" (although some might be saying the more accurate phrase pronunciation "pare kentum"). | |
− | + | In this case, Randall's friends found him so annoying they trained him out of it like a cat by spraying him with water every time he pronounced the word "per-kent." Training people this way was previously a punchline in [[220: Philosophy]]. | |
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==Transcript== | ==Transcript== | ||
+ | {{incomplete transcript|Do NOT delete this tag too soon.}} | ||
:Percentage styles in order of acceptability | :Percentage styles in order of acceptability | ||
:[A long vertical line is shown with five dots on it.] | :[A long vertical line is shown with five dots on it.] | ||
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<!-- How smart are screen readers at recognizing the differences?--> | <!-- How smart are screen readers at recognizing the differences?--> | ||
:65%<!-- ["6", "5" and a "%" symbol]--> | :65%<!-- ["6", "5" and a "%" symbol]--> | ||
− | :[ | + | :[short distance] |
:65 percent<!-- ["6", "5" and the word "percent"]--> | :65 percent<!-- ["6", "5" and the word "percent"]--> | ||
− | :[ | + | :[a much longer distance] |
:65 per cent<!-- ["6", "5" and two words "per" and "cent"]--> | :65 per cent<!-- ["6", "5" and two words "per" and "cent"]--> | ||
− | :[ | + | :[a distance roughly twice the previous] |
:Sixty-five%<!-- ["Sixty-five" as a word and a "%" symbol]--> | :Sixty-five%<!-- ["Sixty-five" as a word and a "%" symbol]--> | ||
− | :[ | + | :[an exceedingly long distance] |
:65 per¢<!-- ["6", "5", the word "per" and the "¢" currency symbol]--> | :65 per¢<!-- ["6", "5", the word "per" and the "¢" currency symbol]--> | ||
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{{comic discussion}} | {{comic discussion}} |