I was under the impression that the {Qoylu’pu’} method of time used a 12-hour clock instead of a 24-hour clock. {wa’maH loSvatlh rep = cha’logh Qoylu’pu’}

Am I wrong about this?

On Nov 23, 2021, at 10:19 AM, luis.chaparro@web.de wrote:

De'vID:

There's yet another way which is used in non-military contexts, and in which interplanetary communications are not a concern, involving the expression {N-logh Qoylu'pu'}, which is also explained in the newsgroup message above.

Thank you for the link, I had totally forgotten the option with *Qoylu'pu'* (and, by the way, I've noticed I've misspelled the verb *Qoy* in my text). In the newsgroup message we read that this way to say the time also works with the 24-hour system (which is common in Europe), so I guess we can say for example *wa'maH chorghlogh Qoylu'pu'*. Should I say for midnight *cha'maH loSlogh Qoylu'pu'* or something with *zero*? And is there a way to tell the minutes when using *Qoylu'pu'*?

As an aside: do we know how to ask for the time when we tell it as hundreds?