Want this question answered?
None are correct it's spelt "clocks"
Keeping time, in the days before mechanical clocks.
The numeral for 4 is often written as IIII on clocks although it is generally written as IV, but both are correct.
they looked at the sun and had worked it out
They used analog clocks. You still see them in many classrooms.
None are correct it's spelt "clocks"
urmm... i think it woz the grandfather clocks they had wall clocks before watches. so its probably just clocks
Keeping time, in the days before mechanical clocks.
The Song-era Chinese had built elaborate clocks centuries before the Europeans, but the West was the first part of the world where clocks became a regular part of urban life. The word "clock" comes from the word for bell. The first mechanical clocks that appeared around 1300 in western Europe were simply bells with an automatic mechanical device to strike the correct number of hours.
because it dont
2 am Is when it officially is supposed to be changed.
Assuming you are referring to daylight savings time, the clocks already changed at 2:00 am on Sunday March 13, 2010.
The numeral for 4 is often written as IIII on clocks although it is generally written as IV, but both are correct.
During the month of October 2011, when Israel has changed their clocks but the US hasn't yet, it's 6 hours later In Israel than it is in New York.
Staying at a fixed time position, both the red and blue clocks will show the correct time twice a day (every 24 hours). So both clocks are equally likely to give the correct time.
Pocket watches, wrist watches, grandfather clocks, and large church clocks do not actually require electronic powering. They are put together using gears and simple machines; in other words they are mechanical and not electronic. Before electricity was used to power watches and clocks, they had to be wound on a regular basis. Before clocks and watches, time was kept track of by the position of the sun in the sky.
Clocks. Sundials.