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17 answers

maybe it fits on the wrist and you have to watch and see the time.and it sounds better than a wrist clock doesn't it

2006-11-22 23:20:08 · answer #1 · answered by arfa54321 5 · 0 0

well firstly a wristwatch was named after the pocketwatch... wristwatchs were originally for women.. it wasn't really until the first world war that wristwatches replaced pocket watches cos it was much easier to glance at your wrist than to be fumbling in your pockets.
Before then the first watch (which is a portable timepiece or chronometer not clock) was invented in order to make navigation on ships possible. Latitude could be calculated from the stars but longitude was done by comparing the median time with the noon sun. A traditional clock mechanism (pedulum etc) didn't work at sea and it required the spring mechanism of the first watch (John Harrison's chronometer) to remain accurate at sea. It was therefore called a watch ( I think ) because of the watches taken on ships not by guards.

2006-11-19 22:18:55 · answer #2 · answered by blue_cabbage 2 · 2 1

previous English wæccan (vb), wæcce (n); relating to wake - it is the place the be conscious got here from. i think of the meaning is hooked as much as the unique meaning of 'a volume of time' that a watchman saved watch, or while the nightwatchman spoke of as that it became into morning, etc. until now wristwatches became prevalent interior the Twenties, maximum watches have been pocket watches, regularly with a cover and carried in a pocket, related to an eye fixed fixed chain or fob. interior the early 1900s, the wristwatch, initially spoke of as a WRISTLET, became into for women and regarded greater of a passing fad than a severe timepiece. actual gents, who carried pocket watches, have been easily quoted as asserting they might "quicker placed on a skirt as placed on a wristwatch". This all replaced in international conflict I - Wikipedia

2016-12-10 12:16:31 · answer #3 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

The watchman called the time in medieval times. The word was just used for the convenience of telling the time hence wristwatch you look at it, you can read the time

2006-11-20 23:58:41 · answer #4 · answered by Jim G 3 · 0 1

Try maxi skirts with the comparative part slits those can look great on you! It doesn't matter if you have long legs or not only strut that skirt

2017-01-31 07:50:40 · answer #5 · answered by Becky 4 · 0 0

Why is a wrist called a wrist? A car called a car? Why isn't a duck called a goose, or maybe a rutabaga? Or why Uranus and not Urectum? These are questions that have made many a sane man not.... sane. Any other questions oh great wonderer?

2006-11-19 22:01:34 · answer #6 · answered by Jean Chretien 1 · 0 2

Before clocks and other timepieces, time-keeping was done by watching the passage of the sun and stars etc. through sundials and general observation.

2006-11-19 21:52:22 · answer #7 · answered by mini metro 6 · 0 1

Always thought it was related to Watch men, who called out the time "one o'clock and all's well" etc in the distant past.

2006-11-19 21:50:52 · answer #8 · answered by mittobridges@btinternet.com 4 · 2 1

Possibly a fob watch (which was the predeccessor was) was used by people on watches, to know when they begin and ended their shift.

2006-11-19 21:43:39 · answer #9 · answered by plwimsett 5 · 2 1

The exact meaning of a time piece on your wrist would be too long to explain, so a watch is just a short, easy to remember word. W.....ord A.....comodating T......ime C....alculating H.....elp.

2006-11-19 21:54:57 · answer #10 · answered by leskinglew 1 · 0 2

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