oscash
Senior Member
- Location
- Sydney - Australia
In school we were always told to say the letter O when saying numbers . I still use it today.
Fully agree with you, Warri...conversation starter for here.Call yourself an Australian? Lazy speech is de rigeur in OZ, as you well know.
As for my mobile number, I commence with Oh then use zero for the numerical zeros in the rest.
Try the Canadian system. Ours is M6H 3N6. Before any one goes ballistic, that post code applies to the one side of a 9 block long street, so I haven't given away any secret information. I can also repeat from memory my Social Insurance Number ( first issued in 1965 ) and the registration number on my Ontario Provincial Driver's license, which includes my date of birth, backwards as a part of it. On the other hand, don't ask me what we ate for supper last Tuesday...Grin. JimB.In all cases I say zero for the number except for my zip code! If I don't say "oh" I forget the whole thing. Nuts.
Oh dear, I did not mean to shame anyone, sorry for thatI hang my head in shame. I never say, "zero". I'm "oh" school.
Sorry, Bretick, no sahme, just my over imaginative self.Oh dear, I did not mean to shame anyone, sorry for that
I must confess, I use O and Zero,, what ever comes out of my mouth at the time.![]()
Which reminds we that we should really switch over to the 24 hour clock. If you think Daylight Saving Time is controversial, just suggest the 24 hour clock.Anyone that has been in the military probably says the word "ZERO."
If it's 2 o'clock in the morning, we say "It's zero-two-hundred-hour." Or, just "Zero-Two-Hundred." NOT "OH TWO-HUNDRED HOUR."
Works for me.Which reminds we that we should really switch over to the 24 hour clock. If you think Daylight Saving Time is controversial, just suggest the 24 hour clock.