A baby born on Dec 31st is 1 year old, and the next day would be 2 years old … A 2 day old baby would be considered 2 years old. Glad they decided that this was beyond odd.
I guess if you phrase it as “how many calendar years were you alive for?” rather than “how many years have you been alive?” then it makes a bit more sense, but it is in many ways a less useful measure of time. It’s a bit like how school years and calendar years don’t line up, so you sometimes need to do a bit of a mental conversion to recall which school year you would have been in for a particular date in the past.
Semi-related, I had a buddy in high school who was born on Dec 31 and another buddy who was born in January. The January buddy was biologically a year older than the December buddy, but they both were in the same class.
A baby born on Dec 31st is 1 year old, and the next day would be 2 years old … A 2 day old baby would be considered 2 years old. Glad they decided that this was beyond odd.
My daughter was born at 22:30 on December 31. In Korea she would have been considered 2 years old when she was born less than 2 hours previously.
I guess if you phrase it as “how many calendar years were you alive for?” rather than “how many years have you been alive?” then it makes a bit more sense, but it is in many ways a less useful measure of time. It’s a bit like how school years and calendar years don’t line up, so you sometimes need to do a bit of a mental conversion to recall which school year you would have been in for a particular date in the past.
Semi-related, I had a buddy in high school who was born on Dec 31 and another buddy who was born in January. The January buddy was biologically a year older than the December buddy, but they both were in the same class.
The second paragraph is such a mindfuck