I was listening to the 1918 recording of British Art. on another thread and it got me thinking. In 1918 they were saying O (letter O) for Zero when spouting off numbers. My question: How far back does saying O for Zero go?
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
Letter O for Zero
Collapse
X
-
Re: Letter O for Zero
It is common in the US too with the majority of exceptions being those in the miltary and aviation who normally say zero.
"O" is a letter and zero is a number.Last edited by JimKindred; 12-10-2008, 11:30 PM.Jim Kindred
Comment
-
Re: Letter O for Zero
My grandfather (86 years old) from Covington, VA still sometimes says "aught" for zero.
I believe that's Appalachian speak... possibly Queen's English.
All the best- Johnny Lloyd:wink_smilJohnny Lloyd
John "Johnny" Lloyd
Moderator
Think before you post... Rules on this forum here
SCAR
Known to associate with the following fine groups: WIG/AG/CR
"Without history, there can be no research standards.
Without research standards, there can be no authenticity.
Without the attempt at authenticity, all is just a fantasy.
Fantasy is not history nor heritage, because it never really existed." -Me
Proud descendant of...
Comment
-
Re: Letter O for Zero
"4 o'clock" is a contraction of "4 of the clock".
The 30 caliber cartridge developed for the US M1903 rifle in 1906 is known as the "30-06", for 30-caliber of 1906. From all I can tell, it has forever been known as the "thirty aught six".
...and this discussion would come to naught if we forgot about "naught"! ;-)John Wickett
Former Carpetbagger
Administrator (We got rules here! Be Nice - Sign Your Name - No Farbisms)
Comment
-
Re: Letter O for Zero
One place that people would be saying this a lot would be when speaking about the year. So was it "eighteen oh nine," "eighteen aught nine," "eighteen zero nine (I doubt it)," or "eighteen hundred and nine"?
A search of the usual databases turns up "eighteen hundred and..." as the most frequent option, and I can't find any examples of "eighteen hundred oh..." (or "o"), but I may have missed some.
Hank Trent
hanktrent@voyager.netHank Trent
Comment
-
Re: Letter O for Zero
Using the term "aught" stands for the 0 (zero) preceding the 6, as in 1906. Just like buckshot being called double "aught" (the size of the lead ball...00 = double aught). Thirty-aught six. I'll have to look it up, but I believe the usage of .30-06 is strctly a civilian term. It should be Caliber .30 US Govt. The only change being using a spitzer boat-tail bullet rather than a round-nosed square-tailed bullet (1903). Before then the US used the .30-40 Krag, it was known as the Krag .30 US Govt. BTW, during WWII the weight of the bullet changed and the cartridge became .30 M2 US Govt.
Just my .02
- Jay Reid
Dreamer42
9th Texas
Franklin "aught-fower"
Banks Grand Re"feet" "aught sev in"
Outpost III
Chickamauga "aught-ate"Jay Reid
Comment
Comment