@freemo
that would be a good exercise on mental gymnastics- at least for those that arent familiar with the systems. i suspect that the part of the brain that would translate this is the same as that when someone is bilingual and merges multiple languages in the same sentence.
@lucifargundam Probably the only way we can prep americans to transition to metric :)
@freemo just dont mix in verbage like "click" when referencing distance, because they might get confused with other meanings... "There were a lot of fans- clicks as far as the eye can see!"
fyi:: in case anyone who didn't know, a 'click' in modern urban social slang is a stereotype-categorizee group of people. whereas a military use of 'klick' refers to a kilometer.
Actually click is not slang at all, nor is it spelled that way (though it is pronounced that way). The word you are looking for is "clique". It is proper and formal english and means a closely connected group (socially speaking a group where every member is a friend with every other, and usually exclusive to new members). It does not relate to stereotypes either.
The term is actually so formal it is even used in math to represent a group of things where each thing knows about every other directly. This is often used in Graph Theory to represent a subgraph or graph that is fully connected (every node connects to every other node).
I lost touch with most of my high school friends (though i went from 10th grade to University so I only had less than half the normal time in high school)... Still I miss them too.
@freemo @deesapoetra
I lost touch with all my high school friends, acquaintences in college and former coworkers from a few years ago. I still barely keep in contact with my former coworkers from my old lab...