A.R.T.

About this blog

Andrew Sharp

A.R.T is the International Air Rail Organisation's blog, with news, articles and comment on all things related to air rail links world-wide. Your comments and thoughts are welcome: for obvious reasons, they will be moderated and may be edited.


<  Aug 2010  >
M T W T F S S
            1
2 3 4 5 6 7 8
9 10 11 12 13 14 15
16 17 18 19 20 21 22
23 24 25 26 27 28 29
30 31          

Search

Categories

Recent Articles

Archives

Friends of A.R.T

Syndicate this blog

What is RSS?

FeedBurner
Subscribe to A.R.T by Email

Other Links

Visit Blogcatalog.com - opens in new window

Blog Directory by Blog Flux

Travel

My Zimbio
Top Stories

Hate Spammers? Check this out - opens in new window

We Support Wikipedia
Wikipedia Affliate Button

Visit the b2evolution website (opens in new window)

Aug10

How many times less than?

Permalink | 10/08/10 | Categories: State of the ART | by: A Sharp English (UK)

A form of words which seems to have come into use recently is the 'x times less than' type of statement - as in 'He earns 10 times less than I do', or 'Rail passengers are 1500 times less likely to have an accident than motor cyclists'.

Very true, no doubt - but what does it mean?

If I have 100, 10 times more than this is 1000 - that's easy. So is 10 times less than this actually a negative figure, -900? If not, why not?

And if you really mean 'one tenth of' then why not say so? That is clear and unambiguous - a tenth of 100 is 100 divided by 10.

Because I came across '1.6 times less than' recently: this is probably '60% of' but it seemed a bizarre way of putting it. I assume that 'two times less than' is a half, and you wouldn't (presumably!) say 'one times less than'!:crazy:

I would like to see this terminology used several times less than I do!

Recommend this article to StumbleUpon.com 
(opens in new browser window)
Permalink |