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MissMisa 04-25-2008 01:31 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by AmbeRz (Post 472202)
Tones is actually spelt 'tons' xDDD

I get annoyed by where/were, there/their aswell. >.<

No it aint, it's 'tonnes' :D

If there is one, it's a ton, if theres more, it's tonnes.

AmbeRz 04-25-2008 01:32 PM

Okay, we're both wrong! :D

I have an excuse though. I'm only 14. XD

Hisuwashi 04-25-2008 01:34 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by MissMisa (Post 472219)
No it aint, it's 'tonnes' :D

If there is one, it's a ton, if theres more, it's tonnes.

No 'ton' and 'tonne' are different measurements actually. Ton is the imperial unit.

MissMisa 04-25-2008 01:37 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Hisuwashi (Post 472224)
No 'ton' and 'tonne' are different measurements actually. Ton is the imperial unit.


Tonne is the orginal word, but it's most commonly used here as 'Ton' for 1, and 'Tonnes' - for more, even though they are both different weights. In slang, it's said 'Tons.'


So yes, your right but when people say 'ton' or 'tonne' they don't literally mean the actual mass. It just means something very heavy!

'long ton (simply ton in countries such as the United Kingdom which formerly used the Imperial system of weights and measures) is a weight ton or gross ton, and is 2,240 pounds (exactly 1,016.0469088 kg). In the UK and most of the areas which used the Imperial system, the metric ton (1,000 kg), which it is conveniently very similar to – less than 2% difference – is the only form of ton legal for trade.'

A tonne (t) or metric ton, also referred to as a metric tonne or tonne métrique, is a measurement of mass equal to 1,000 kilograms. It is not an SI unit but is accepted for use with the SI.[1] The proper SI unit for a tonne would be a "megagram" (Mg, see SI prefix), but this term is rarely used in practice. Though the spelling tonne predates the introduction of the SI system in 1960 (it has been used in France for centuries, where it comes from), it is now used as the standard spelling for the metric mass measurement in some English-speaking countries. In the United States the correct term is metric ton.[2] The comparable imperial and US customary units are spelled ton in English.

In the USA this unit was defined in 1866[3] as a millier or a tonneau (both French words). This measure was used in Europe centuries earlier. However, neither of these latter words are in use in the USA and though they still appear in the statute, they have been declared obsolete by NIST.[2]


It seems now that this is debatable how you spell it :D

Hisuwashi 04-25-2008 01:42 PM

OK, Excellent research, then :D
(but you should have said "you're"). XD

MissMisa 04-25-2008 01:44 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Hisuwashi (Post 472238)
OK, Excellent research, then :D
(but you should have said "you're"). XD

Yeah I know. It's a typo.

I got an A* in English literature and A in English Language exams so I am perfectly literate.

And thank you ^______________^

[Wikipedia is my good old friend you see.]

Hisuwashi 04-25-2008 01:54 PM

Thanks...:D
I really hate the sight of an incorrect "you(')r(e)" >.>

Wikipedia is good, but sometimes people do just write whatever the hell they want, so I'm sometimes careful to take its information with a pinch of salt. xD

MissMisa 04-25-2008 01:58 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Hisuwashi (Post 472253)
Thanks...:D
I really hate the sight of an incorrect "you(')r(e)" >.>

Wikipedia is good, but sometimes people do just write whatever the hell they want, so I'm sometimes careful to take its information with a pinch of salt. xD

I'm not that picky about grammer. I know the differences between 'you're' [meaning 'you are' like don't is do not.] and 'your' perfectly well, it was just a typo because I happen to be a human and not a robot! What does annoy me however is 'hi how r u' style sentances.

It depends, if it's something open to controversy I usually stay clear.

Suki 04-25-2008 02:32 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by MissMisa (Post 472256)
I'm not that picky about grammer.

Grammer...? :D

Aight, this is about to get annoying, let's cut it out before it grows to an obsession level.

I use abbreviations most of the time when talking on msn. At least when someone types u they know that it isn't a real word; what's sad is that a lot of peope who misuse you're/your do not know they're actually making a mistake.

I got one more!! Than and then :eek: This one does make me wanna throw a dictionary at them >.<!

MissMisa 04-25-2008 02:34 PM

It is extremely annoying to be fucking corrected everytime you make a friggin post >.<

I now understand how the 'how r u' people feel. :D


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