I often have to thrash at least one of my assistants for inexcusable errors such as referring to degrees kelvin instead of just kelvin.
Dear Steve,
I was taught 'degrees Kelvin' at school, but then again, around the time of the changeover (if those dates are right) was when I took my physics A-level.
Cheers,
R.
Hi! Nice to be here
5- all photography were made using film-no flash, no editing
Which one do you like better, or have you another suggestion?
It would be nice if you can help me!
Except that unfortunately the original post asked for English. That is not English. It has missing capitalization and "Photoshop" is one word and is a proper noun."all photos were taken using film, no flash and no photo shop."
simple and easy. says everything you are trying to say. most americans say take a photo not make one. add photo shop just to be sure everyone understands.
eddie
Except that unfortunately the original post asked for English. That is not English. It has missing capitalization and "Photoshop" is one word and is a proper noun.
I try not to get too pedantic. Truth be told, I make far too many mistakes myself, but such blatant offences against humanity do stick out.You must be nearly as pedantic as me!
My current favourites for correcting are the usual mis-placed apostrophe in plurals and correcting 'try and...' to 'try to...'
Steve.
***
My teeth also grate, my eyeballs spin and my hair, such of it that remains, stands to attention when I hear "degrees kelvin"... Like others, I was taught "kelvin". You do not, for example, say "100 degrees metres", "10 kilo degree grams" or even "47.5 degrees pascal".
Cheers, Bob.
I note that you have not capitalised 'kelvin', unlike some reprobates I could mention.
... As far as I know, the degree Celsius is the only exception, and that isn't a base SI unit, but a derived unit.
Roger,
What we were taught at the chalk-and-slate schools we went to, and what is correct according to the SI rules may be two different things. In SI it does not matter if a unit was named after Lord Kelvin or cousin Kevin, there's no capitalisation of unit names unless they would be capitalised for other reasons: eg when they are at the beginning of a sentence.
The symbol (it is not an abbreviation) may be capitalised, so the symbol for the kelvin is 'K', and the symbol for the watt is 'W', for example. As far as I know, the degree Celsius is the only exception, and that isn't a base SI unit, but a derived unit.
Best,
helen
I remember candela for light, mol for mass ... second for time ... but what is the standard for temperature?
Was Kelvin selected?
But I think there are worse sins than capitalizing the units in full.
Roger, there's no 'symbol/abbreviation' fight is there? The SI conventions and definitions are clearly and unequivocally laid down so there can be no argument. Whether one wishes to follow the SI conventions is one's own business.
R, that depends on what you're trying to convey. There's a little bit of difference between MW (megawatt) and mW (milliwatt), and between Nm (newtonmeter) and nm (nanometer) - as I'm constantly trying to tell my colleagues.
...I suspect it is because "degrees Celsius" is really a posessive, not a name: i.e. it means "Celsius' degrees".
...
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