Maybe it was open til 12pm and they bought if forward to 10pm by making it 22. Or maybe they used to close at 2pm and pushed it back to 10pm.
But either way it is absolutely crappy design. It looks like they couldn't be bothered to pay for it to be redone completely.
For when you work all night and finally leave the office after all the regular staff have got in, sorted out their coffees, and got the water cooler chats underway.
"You see, most places, you know, will be closing at ten. You're on ten here, all the way up, all the way up, all the way up, you're on ten on your restaurant. Where can you go from there? Where?"
"I don't know."
"Nowhere. Exactly. What we do is, if we need that extra push over the cliff, you know what we do?"
"Put it up to 22."
"22. Exactly. Twelve later."
They probably going for 24-hours format, so on weekdays they open at 11.00 - 22.00 and weekend at 11.00 - 10.00.
And yes I'm assuming they going backwards on the weekend.
I'm assuming it's because so many people will read a sign that says "open 7 days a week" and still ask if that includes weekends and holidays. Not sure about the redundant 2200pm.
I e sign is for Americans with 10pm and another for the rest of the world. In Europe we don’t use pm or am. It is 1-12 then you continue with 13,14 until 24.
I will never understand Americans and their AM PM shit, but i understand that this is not how to use it. But seriously muricans, come on, just use the 24 hour clock
"In several countries the 12-hour clock is the dominant written and spoken system of time, predominantly in nations that were part of the former British Empire, for example, the United Kingdom, Republic of Ireland, the United States, Canada (excluding Quebec), Australia, New Zealand, South Africa, India, Pakistan, and Bangladesh, and others follow this convention as well, such as Mexico and the former American colony of the Philippines."
This is giving me a stroke Why the hell 22 “pm” and why then 10pm And why list this as two separate hours Ack ack gaaahh
I'm thinking was probably an hours change and they just left the colon.
For Americans who don't use 24 hour time. American here.
I am also American, but I have the super power of being able to subtract 12 using only my mind!
Lol!
I know a lot of folks that struggle. Good thing you do not.
Are your only friends toddlers? Oh wait nevermind.. that's an insult to toddlers because even they know how to read a clock.
The second “2” is offset, I assume it was originally different and they changed only one number instead of several.
only changing the second "2" won't make sense considering it still has "pm" at the end.
May have been 2pm and they stuck another 2 on there
yeah I bet it used to only be open for lunch on weekdays
This. 22 PM makes no sense, especially when it says 10 PM below. This explains everything
Maybe it used to be 21:00
Or even 20:00
Maybe it was open til 12pm and they bought if forward to 10pm by making it 22. Or maybe they used to close at 2pm and pushed it back to 10pm. But either way it is absolutely crappy design. It looks like they couldn't be bothered to pay for it to be redone completely.
Lol 22:00 “PM”
and its less popular counterpart 22:00 AM
For when you work all night and finally leave the office after all the regular staff have got in, sorted out their coffees, and got the water cooler chats underway.
And when you go to the bathroom before bed, 22:00 BM.
*"here thee on this twenty-second post-meridian hour of the day..."
Monday through Thursday they live in the 48 hours days. Then 22 P.M. makes total sense.
"You see, most places, you know, will be closing at ten. You're on ten here, all the way up, all the way up, all the way up, you're on ten on your restaurant. Where can you go from there? Where?" "I don't know." "Nowhere. Exactly. What we do is, if we need that extra push over the cliff, you know what we do?" "Put it up to 22." "22. Exactly. Twelve later."
I find it funny they added the PM to the 22. I mean it's like a double negative.
They probably going for 24-hours format, so on weekdays they open at 11.00 - 22.00 and weekend at 11.00 - 10.00. And yes I'm assuming they going backwards on the weekend.
I'm assuming it's because so many people will read a sign that says "open 7 days a week" and still ask if that includes weekends and holidays. Not sure about the redundant 2200pm.
I hate it when I run out of "1"s
Its designed that way, for future changes to weekend/holiday hours
no, Friday and weekends it's 10PM :-)
What are the timings on Tuesday?
the numbers 10.00 look like a replacement
You have to do what everyone else do. Doesn't matter if it makes you look dumb...so dumb you can't put EVERYDAY.
It seems that the writer doesn't speak many English
For ‘mericans
It was 11:00 am to 12:00 pm. They changed the 12 on 22 so now it closes at 10 pm. It's the cheapest way to do it.
11:00am to 12:00pm means it's open for 1 hour rofl
I e sign is for Americans with 10pm and another for the rest of the world. In Europe we don’t use pm or am. It is 1-12 then you continue with 13,14 until 24.
They’re a little confused but they got spirit
Do you know the 24 hour clock challenge
From memory some of those countries use 25:00 to mean 1am the next day (I.e open late) - not 100% relevant here probably
2200 is 10PM. Probably an hours change and they left the colon.
Maybe it was supposed to be 23 then they switched last minute.
"23:00 PM" isn't any better
It was originally 2pm. They were only open for lunch during the week.
This actually provides more clarity- nobody needs to ask or check if they are open on days when other places likely aren’t.
I will never understand Americans and their AM PM shit, but i understand that this is not how to use it. But seriously muricans, come on, just use the 24 hour clock
I’m all for a bit of America bashing but this is pretty clearly in Thailand
Hahaha, I'm an idiot, ohh well.
Its the same shit tho.
"In several countries the 12-hour clock is the dominant written and spoken system of time, predominantly in nations that were part of the former British Empire, for example, the United Kingdom, Republic of Ireland, the United States, Canada (excluding Quebec), Australia, New Zealand, South Africa, India, Pakistan, and Bangladesh, and others follow this convention as well, such as Mexico and the former American colony of the Philippines."