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I Speak Your Length In Tongues is the collective name given to two new measuring tapes. The Old Testament tape is for measuring longer distances, and the New Testament tape is for the shorter measures. (ie less than 10 feet)
The big difference between these tapes and that of any other is that they
speak out the distance in a commanding biblical voice (complete with appropriate references) when the lock button is pressed. Here's a brief description of how they work:
The tapes will only measure between the extended end point (0) and to the exact width of the device itself. Running the Old Testament tape along the length of a table for example produces this result: the voice speaks these words "the length given by the Lord is 2' and 5", which is the same size as the wooden angles used by Noah to reinforce the doors of the giraffe enclosure on his flood rescue ark"
New Testament tape produces similar Biblical references derived from that set of texts. e.g. length of the fishbones from the Loaves and Fishes feeding the 5,000 story.
The information is of course all stored in a comprehensive digitised data base that assigns a biblical equivalent to every measured value, and is delivered via a volume and tone contolled speaker.
Naturally there are equivalent measuring devices for other religions and for those like me who are total non-believers in anything, there are other references such as The Combined Writings of Flann O'Brien, Samuel Beckett and William Shakespeare. These create examples such as: "this is the same length as the handlebar width of Sergeant Pluck's bicycle in The Third Policeman"
Cubits
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cubit ancient unit of length [Loris, Jun 19 2022]
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Annotation:
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//length of the fishbones// don't be giving us ideas now! |
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If it were "in tongues" then it would not speak anything coherent or comprehensible, just inspired babble. |
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Also how come it is speaking in English in your examples? Should be Hebrew and Aramaic surely? And the units should be cubits rather than feet and inches? |
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Also the idea of translating standard units of measurement into comparative ones is a well-worn trope in the "Feedback" page of New Scientist. |
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I know feet and inches are antiquated, and only currently used by old-
age pensioners, wierdos and Americans - but they're not *that* old.
Inches are first recorded in the 7th century.
As pocmloc says, you probably want to use cubits. |
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Also, you probably want to round to 40 as far as possible. |
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All creatives use feet and inches. |
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//creatives// sp. weirdos |
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//All creatives use feet and inches.// |
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Well, God apparently works in cubits.
You mentioned the Ark. Well, various bibles seem to agree
that it was 300 cubits long,
50 cubits wide, and 30 cubits high. (Genesis 6:15) |
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Those are the specs, handed down from on high. |
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Your hair is looking particularly bouffant today. |
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As I've stated elsewhere, the Planck length is ~1 E-38 miles, so
physical items default to imperial. Light however is obviously
metric. |
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//As I've stated elsewhere, the Planck length is ~1 E-38
miles// |
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But it's bad form to use large units for small things, when
smaller units exist. Like you
can't insist on paying for expensive things with tons of
pennies, or buy a penny sweet with a hundred pound note.
If you /must/ use imperial, you should probably express it as
fractions of a twip. |
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I guess this is pretty halfbaked by any
measurement. + |
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We actually use these in modern Judaism. Even those who
don't believe, and just practice the traditions and culture. At
some stage, some people (sages) were obsessed with these
numbers. |
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There was a Babylonian rabbi who used to nitpick and ask
questions about what happens if one foot of the bird is in the
enclosed area while the other leg is out, and he was thrown
out more than once for that. |
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