NordicSomali
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4=10 and 5=11
Yep. You just have to subtract 6, if it reads 10 am itβs 4 saac subaxnimo, and 13 pm becomes 7 saac duhurnimo4=10 and 5=11
The time of the day in Somalia starts at 7am which is 1 saac subaxnimo (first hour after sunrise) and ends at 6pm which is 12 saac, 7 pm marks the start of the night which makes it 1 saac habeenimo. (First hour after sunset)I think this is only in southern Somalis so me I didn't understand this
So why do Ugandans/tanzanians/Kenyans also tell the time that way?It is actually an Italian system, and common in its colonies incl. Southern Somalia, where a 24-hour system is being used instead of the 12-hour, a common practice in the English speaking world. For example, where in the UK, one would say, 07:00 am, in Italy, or Xamar, one would say, it is 01:00 o'clock at daybreak. In the said system, a.m or p.m is not being used, and the day is broken into 4 segments: morning, afternoon, evening, and night.
I learnt about that when I first met an Eritrean friend's parents, who would tell the time in that form, and later when I visited Rome, and Xamar.
It was also a question on the Mystery Hour on LBC, for those of you in the UK.
Do they? I have no idea.So why do Ugandans/tanzanians/Kenyans also tell the time that way?
Do they? I have no idea.
That's what guycalledAmin said I have no idea myselfIt is not just in Somalia that people read the time weird but also Uganda, Kenyan, Tanzania, and Ethiopia. This phenomena is highly prominent in the Whole of East Africa. They believe that the day starts in the morning (7am = 1) and not midnight hence why we still call 3am, habeen.
To read the time like this, just say the number that is directly opposite of the current time. For example:
7 becomes 1
8 becomes 2
10 becomes 4
12 becomes 6
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