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  2. 7. +1, but the difference is even greater than you suggest -- many of the google hits for timezone - "time zone" relate to computer language specifications. Of the first page of results, 7+/10 are computer-talk. As an example of US usage, "Eastern Standard Timezone" gets ~25k ghits, while "Eastern Standard Time Zone" gets ~3.4M.

  3. differences - "In your time" or "at your time"? - English...

    english.stackexchange.com/questions/302809/in-your-time-or-at-your-time

    Neither works well. In your time suggests that you are referring to your partner's past. E.g. We sleep earlier these days. 11pm in your time (30 years ago) would have been like 7pm today. The second doesn't sound idiomatic to my ears. Try. at 11pm, your time. thank you @Lawrence, will use "at 11pm, your time." instead.

  4. Proper Timezone Acronym Usage - PT vs PDT or PST

    english.stackexchange.com/questions/88485

    With that in mind, another way of viewing it is: PDT: A fixed, standard time, always UTC-7. PST: A fixed, standard time, always UTC-8. PT (or rarely, PDST): A vaguer concept taken to mean "whatever UTC offset is currently in effect in the Pacific Timezone, in the location given by context". Usually, then, when talking to humans (as opposed to ...

  5. "In time" versus "on time" - English Language & Usage Stack...

    english.stackexchange.com/questions/17436

    10. In this case, "on time" is the proper choice. More details about the differences: "In time" is used to suggest that I was able to perform an action before another event occurred: I was able to reach you in time. The difference between "in time" and "on time" would be deadlines or schedules that revolve around very specific date or hour:

  6. Origin of "island time" - English Language & Usage Stack Exchange

    english.stackexchange.com/questions/305383/origin-of-island-time

    c. Chiefly depreciative or humorous. With preceding modifying word relating to a group, country, etc.: the attitude to timekeeping associated with the specified type of people, usually implying a relaxed, haphazard, or unreliable approach to punctuality, keeping to a schedule, etc. Indian time Maori time Mexican time Gay people time island time.

  7. Include the minutes unless the time is the top of an hour (e.g., 10:30 a.m., 10 a.m.). Always include a.m. or p.m. unless the time is noon or midnight. Write a.m. and p.m. lowercase with periods. Do not use 12 with noon or midnight. From the University of Southern Indiana style guide: From the Hull University style guide:

  8. "Indian" comes from Italian/Spanish "gente in dios" (God-like...

    english.stackexchange.com/questions/490511

    A Hathi Trust search of the bilingual (Spanish/English) edition of the Cecil Jane translation of The Four Voyages of Columbus: A Documentary History reports 90 instances of the word gente and 50 instances of the word Dios, but 0 instances of the phrase gente in Dios.

  9. 8/7c = eight-seven-central. It's a convenient abbreviation of 8 p.m. Eastern Time; 7 p.m. Central Time. This form is popular in broadcasting circles, where television networks serve viewers in both the Eastern and Central time zones in the United States. Share. Improve this answer.

  10. First use of American football fields as measurement

    english.stackexchange.com/questions/517046/first-use-of-american-football...

    The earliest example I've been able to find (so far) in which "football fields" are used as units of linear measure is from "Jack Coffey in Flying Picture" in the [Greencastle, Indiana] Daily Banner (May 12, 1944):

  11. phrases - What exactly is a "ring-a-ding girl"? - English...

    english.stackexchange.com/questions/557733/what-exactly-is-a-ring-a-ding-girl

    ring-a-ding-ding or ring-a-ding 1 n Glamor and show; spectacular impressiveness; = RAZZLE-DAZZLE: an aura of breathless showbiz ring-a-ding-ding —Albert Goldman 2 adj: Our new stack addition is a huge brick building full of metal, a ring-a-doing book box —American Libraries. Tom Dalzell & Terry Victor, The New Partridge Dictionary of Slang ...