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  • What idiomatic way to say this is I cannot tell the

    time “To tell the time”

    is the idiomatic verb used for the activity of determining the time from an analog dial; it would not imply a digital display, nor does it suggest a watch face or a clock face. Learning to tell the time is a true expression among parents of low-school children.

    The context of ‘clock’ in the phrase’reading the time from a clock’ implies that the clock is analog, and the word is unusual in non-technical context. Why can someone without time know the translation of the words “analog” or “for” or ‘for’?

    As of 2014 the American English version of “to tell time” is “to tell time”.

    • 771222 views
    • 48 answers
    • 286055 votes
  • What idiomatic way to say this is I cannot tell the

    time “To tell the time”

    is the idiomatic verb used for the activity of determining the time from an analog dial; it would not imply a digital display, nor does it suggest a watch face or a clock face. Learning to tell the time is a true expression among parents of low-school children.

    The context of ‘clock’ in the phrase’reading the time from a clock’ implies that the clock is analog, and the word is unusual in non-technical context. Why can someone without time know the translation of the words “analog” or “for” or ‘for’?

    As of 2014 the American English version of “to tell time” is “to tell time”.

    • 771222 views
    • 48 answers
    • 286055 votes
  • What idiomatic way to say this is I cannot tell the

    time “To tell the time”

    is the idiomatic verb used for the activity of determining the time from an analog dial; it would not imply a digital display, nor does it suggest a watch face or a clock face. Learning to tell the time is a true expression among parents of low-school children.

    The context of ‘clock’ in the phrase’reading the time from a clock’ implies that the clock is analog, and the word is unusual in non-technical context. Why can someone without time know the translation of the words “analog” or “for” or ‘for’?

    As of 2014 the American English version of “to tell time” is “to tell time”.

    • 771222 views
    • 48 answers
    • 286055 votes
  • What idiomatic way to say this is I cannot tell the

    time “To tell the time”

    is the idiomatic verb used for the activity of determining the time from an analog dial; it would not imply a digital display, nor does it suggest a watch face or a clock face. Learning to tell the time is a true expression among parents of low-school children.

    The context of ‘clock’ in the phrase’reading the time from a clock’ implies that the clock is analog, and the word is unusual in non-technical context. Why can someone without time know the translation of the words “analog” or “for” or ‘for’?

    As of 2014 the American English version of “to tell time” is “to tell time”.

    • 771222 views
    • 48 answers
    • 286055 votes
  • What idiomatic way to say this is I cannot tell the

    time “To tell the time”

    is the idiomatic verb used for the activity of determining the time from an analog dial; it would not imply a digital display, nor does it suggest a watch face or a clock face. Learning to tell the time is a true expression among parents of low-school children.

    The context of ‘clock’ in the phrase’reading the time from a clock’ implies that the clock is analog, and the word is unusual in non-technical context. Why can someone without time know the translation of the words “analog” or “for” or ‘for’?

    As of 2014 the American English version of “to tell time” is “to tell time”.

    • 771222 views
    • 48 answers
    • 286055 votes
  • What idiomatic way to say this is I cannot tell the

    time “To tell the time”

    is the idiomatic verb used for the activity of determining the time from an analog dial; it would not imply a digital display, nor does it suggest a watch face or a clock face. Learning to tell the time is a true expression among parents of low-school children.

    The context of ‘clock’ in the phrase’reading the time from a clock’ implies that the clock is analog, and the word is unusual in non-technical context. Why can someone without time know the translation of the words “analog” or “for” or ‘for’?

    As of 2014 the American English version of “to tell time” is “to tell time”.

    • 771222 views
    • 48 answers
    • 286055 votes
  • What idiomatic way to say this is I cannot tell the

    time “To tell the time”

    is the idiomatic verb used for the activity of determining the time from an analog dial; it would not imply a digital display, nor does it suggest a watch face or a clock face. Learning to tell the time is a true expression among parents of low-school children.

    The context of ‘clock’ in the phrase’reading the time from a clock’ implies that the clock is analog, and the word is unusual in non-technical context. Why can someone without time know the translation of the words “analog” or “for” or ‘for’?

    As of 2014 the American English version of “to tell time” is “to tell time”.

    • 771222 views
    • 48 answers
    • 286055 votes