Actually the change was part of the change to the metric sytem in the NEC. Note that the metric units are now first and the english units are second in the code now.Next thing you know we'll be on the metric system
Certainly the "M" means 1000. But do we really know whether the "M" in "MCM" came from the Roman numeral? Could it not have been from the word for "one thousand" in the French, Italian, or some other language, perhaps even Latin? Can anyone provide a reference that clearly states the source of the "M"?Originally posted by paul: M=1000 in Roman numerals
History tells us that the official language of the Roman Empire was Latin. The Roman Numeral M comes from the Latin word 'Mille', which means 1000. French, Italian & Spanish are all decendants from the Latin language.Originally posted by charlie b:
Certainly the "M" means 1000. But do we really know whether the "M" in "MCM" came from the Roman numeral? Could it not have been from the word for "one thousand" in the French, Italian, or some other language, perhaps even Latin? Can anyone provide a reference that clearly states the source of the "M"?Originally posted by paul: M=1000 in Roman numerals
I heard we wound up with English by only one vote.Originally posted by allenwayne:. . . did you know that in the 1700`s German was almost voted in as the official language. So what would mcm or kcml be then
That reminds me of an observation by one of my favorite authors, Douglas Adams (rest his soul). He pointed out that it was a waste of time to describe a web site by saying (out loud), the "WWW." Each time you pronounce the letter "W," it takes you three syllables to say it. So "WWW" takes nine syllables to pronounce. If we just said "World Wide Web," we could get the job done with only three syllables.Originally posted by goldstar: I know kcmils isn't difficult to remember but MCM is much easier to say and it won't stop there.
It can't; it makes sense. :roll:Originally posted by charlie b:
Think it will catch on?![]()
