RHP General Forum Conversation
Sole purpose of this thread: to disprove my already posted view to Ponderable (in the "jimslyp forum killing champion" thread) that, "... the cause of this forum's gradual decline is disinterest in conversation". If you will commit to helping 'our conversation' achieve one hundred plus (100+) posts by August 31, 2013, please sign here: 1) Grampy Bobby; 2) _____;
So, has anyone had any exceptionally exciting things or life changing events happen lately? I'm finally back to feeling well.
Originally posted by Grampy Bobbyok, there sholdn't be any problem to reach the 100 hundred. Did you ever wonder why we are so obsessed with "round" numbers?
[b]RHP General Forum Conversation
Sole purpose of this thread: to disprove my already posted view to Ponderable (in the "jimslyp forum killing champion" thread) that, "... the cause of this forum's gradual decline is disinterest in conversation". If you will commit to helping 'our conversation' achieve one hundred plus (100+) posts by August 31, ...[text shortened]... exciting things or life changing events happen lately? I'm finally back to feeling well.[/b]
Originally posted by Ponderable"Did you ever wonder why we are so obsessed with "round" numbers?"
ok, there sholdn't be any problem to reach the 100 hundred. Did you ever wonder why we are so obsessed with "round" numbers?
Yes. Concluded the convention relates to denominations of currency. Do you think 200+ is within reach by the same date?
Round numbers are mostly easier to say, seventy-nine has 4 syllables, eighty has 2. Three hundred and four has two syllables more than three hundred.
Exact numbers always offer encouragement to others to question your source and accuracy, because they sound real. Round numbers sound as if they were pulled from the air and are unlikely to be questioned in the same way.
Originally posted by KewpieWhen you are selling something £1.99 is apparently better than £2.00 even though it has more syllables, is it the same with Aussie dollars?
Round numbers are mostly easier to say, seventy-nine has 4 syllables, eighty has 2. Three hundred and four has two syllables more than three hundred.
Exact numbers always offer encouragement to others to question your source and accuracy, because they sound real. Round numbers sound as if they were pulled from the air and are unlikely to be questioned in the same way.
Drapers' prices (they're the "just-under" ones) have always intrigued me because they show that my thought processes must be different from the norm. I see $5.99, I read $6, then I'm further along the aisle and decide I want it, but remember what I thought $6 and what I read =99 so I now think $7 and don't go back. Yet if I'd seen $6 I would now think $6. Daft.
I thought this habit would disappear along with halfpennies in 1966 but it seems the marketers and I have different ideas. I will say that almost nobody does it now outside the supermarkets, and they don't care what the cents digits are. I don't get a string of .99s on my register tapes.