Correct,they are two corresponding 'halves',not equal halves - and a case of a 'half' not being an equal half.You can't use this logic to seperate a single object into two parts and call them halves,unless they are equal halves.I wouldn't like to be in a Lottery syndicate who followed that train of thought - "hey, we just won 20 million last night - here's your pound, the other 'half' is mine" :-)noryport wrote:In a lot of cases the bolt is heavier and bigger than the nut that goes on to it..
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When is a half not a equal half
Re: When is a half not a equal half
Re: When is a half not a equal half
One more time, anytime when half is used and the object isnt divided exactly by two it is an improper use of the word and you should be using the word parts. Something divided into two parts is not always in two halves. Just because there is a corruption, of the use of a term, does not mean this then becomes a correct use or more worringly in the OPs case replaces the original meaning.
Re: When is a half not a equal half
Many years ago at school I used to serve the school dinners (aged about 9 or 10)... I was serving the pudding and asked the teacher at the table if she wanted "the big half or the little half" as I had cut the pudding into two unequal parts. I then got a lecture on what a half was and that there was "no such thing as a big half and a little half". Funny how you remember those little incidences!
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Last edited by ZZ330 on Thu May 09, 2013 11:08 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Re: When is a half not a equal half
jakdaw wrote:One more time, anytime when half is used and the object isnt divided exactly by two it is an improper use of the word and you should be using the word parts. Something divided into two parts is not always in two halves. Just because there is a corruption, of the use of a term, does not mean this then becomes a correct use or more worringly in the OPs case replaces the original meaning.


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