This one really did happen in the shower.

  • @Notyou@sopuli.xyz
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    4 months ago

    People also turn 1 year old the day before their birthday. Like you said a babies first birthday is the start of their second year. Meaning you can legally purchase alcohol the day before your 21st or 18th birthday depending on your local laws.

    • @tuck182@lemmy.world
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      64 months ago

      That doesn’t sound right to me. Discounting leap years, you should turn 1 year old on your first birthday at the time of your birth (or considering the existence of leap years, 6 hours later than that, either the day of or the day before, depending).

      • @Notyou@sopuli.xyz
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        44 months ago

        It might be a state by state, country by country thing. I know in Virginia it is the day before your 21at birthday based off some court case explaining the 365 days = a year thing.

        https://www.abc.virginia.gov/licenses/retail-resources/preventing-underage-sales

        When does a person reach their 21st birthday? The attorney general’s office has opined that a person attains his/her next year of age on the day prior to his/her birthday. (1963 Va. AG LEXIS 215; 1962-1963 Op. Atty Gen. Va. 87)

  • Jared White
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    44 months ago

    ngl, I have spent way too much time thinking about those very points 😅

  • @proper@lemmy.world
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    34 months ago

    well yeah years don’t have birthdays. Assuming year one was 1 and not 0 and age goes from 0 months to 1 year in the first year.

    • @JubilantJaguar@lemmy.worldOP
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      14 months ago

      If year 1 was relabeled 0 then that would make centuries more logical. But probably there would be illogical side effects that I’m having trouble imagining right now.

  • @spongebue@lemmy.world
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    24 months ago

    I’ve heard about the “Korean age” where everyone is 1 at birth and gains a year at the same time on New Year’s. Seems wacky until you think of it as how many calendar years you’ve been alive for. I mean, it’s still odd but not as bad

    • @JubilantJaguar@lemmy.worldOP
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      24 months ago

      Indeed! And it gets even weirder:

      A person is allowed tobacco and alcohol if it is after January 1 of the year one turns 19 (post-birth age). This is the “year age”, which is basically (Korean age – 1), or when a person’s Korean age is 20.

      Ha! Thanx for the insight.