by Ed Pettibone » Sun Mar 08, 2015 5:52 pm
Ed: Uh, fellows it is Daylight saving not savings.
The practice of turning the clocks one hour forward to save energy is often called “daylight savings time”. However, daylight saving time (DST) is considered to be the correct term. timeanddate.com briefly looks at DST’s variations such as “daylight savings time”, “daylight-saving time” and “summer time”.
The media have, over the years, been publishing and broadcasting variations of the expression "daylight saving time".
Daylight Savings Time Commonly Used
Many print, online, and broadcast media sources that cover news articles, announcements or features about daylight saving time (DST) often use the phrase “daylight savings” or “daylight savings time”. These phrases are used to describe the possible energy or electricity savings that are made (or not made) as a result of such a schedule.
However, daylight saving time (DST) is considered to be the correct term for the practice of advancing clocks to save energy because it refers to a time for saving daylight. Nonetheless, “daylight savings time” is still commonly used, especially in countries such as Australia, Canada and the United States. Another variation seen in many news reports or articles is “daylight-saving time”, which includes use of the hyphen between “daylight” and “saving”.
DST refers to when clock is usually moved one hour forward in the spring and back in the fall (autumn) in a particular country or place. DST does not add daylight but it gives more usable hours of daylight. In that sense, DST “saves” daylight, especially during the winter months when the days get colder and darker. Standard time refers to time without DST.
“Summer Time”
Another term that is commonly used to refer to DST, particularly in places such as the United Kingdom, is “summer time”. British Summer Time (BST) is the period in which DST is observed in the United Kingdom. The term “winter time” is used for standard time, or time without DST. The term “summer time” is used in various bills and Acts about DST in the United Kingdom. This includes the Summer Time Act of 1916, the Summer Time Act of 1925, and the Summer Time Act of 1972.
The term sommerzeit (summer time) has also been used in Germany to describe DST. For example, on April 6, 1916, the German Federal Council decreed that its summer daylight saving time would be instituted in Germany as a wartime measure, starting the last Sunday of that month. Germany was one of the first countries to observe DST.
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