November 02, 2008, 06:53
shufitzWatch what is it
A few minutes ago I was resetting my wristwatch backwards an hour, for the shift from Daylight Saving Time to Standard Time. I grasped the little knob, on the right side of the watch, that you pull out and then twist to move the watch's hands.
And a question suddenly popped into my mind.
What do you call that little knob?November 02, 2008, 07:22
zmježdBefore quartz movement watches, I think it was called the
winding knob.
[Addendum: according to the glossary at this site (
link) the term is
crown.
quote:
Crown – The ridged knob on the outside of a watch which is used to set or wind the watch. A piece fastened to the stem for winding the watch. (Slang term: winding knob or button). The crown can operate with a "screw-down" or "pusher" motion.
]
November 02, 2008, 07:36
<Asa Lovejoy>Ah, ya beat me to it, zmj!
Now, why do we call a mobile timepiece a watch, and a fixed position one a clock?
November 02, 2008, 07:52
<Proofreader>quote:
mobile timepiece a watch
Because you can "watch" it "move"?
November 02, 2008, 08:00
zmježdClocks because of their
bells (German
Glocke, French
cloche, older
cloque) and watches originally because of an
alarum (modern
alarm < French < Italian
all'arme 'to arms') attached to clocks to wake (Old English
wacian 'to be awake, keep awake, watch' <
wacan 'to awake, arise',
link, whence
wake,
watch) a person. The Navy uses
bells for telling (
toll) time and watches for turns at staying awake and being on duty.