Frazz by Jef Mallett for July 06, 2022

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    Cactus-Pete  almost 2 years ago

    For me it would be about 2,160 steps.

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    RAGs  almost 2 years ago

    If you walk backwards, does it count down?

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    Concretionist  almost 2 years ago

    The mile is actually 1000 paces for a troop of Roman soldiers (a pace is the distance between when the same foot comes down, so two steps). Comes from the Latin word for 1000. We also know that a person’s pace is pretty close to their height (at least for a vigorous young to middle aged person). So we know that the average Roman soldier was about 5.28 feet tall. Five foot three or a bit above.

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    Kiba65  almost 2 years ago

    Get a dog and name it one mile and walk him every day!!

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    Baslim the Beggar Premium Member almost 2 years ago

    Sounds like a Lao Tse joke to me, Frazz.

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    eromlig  almost 2 years ago
    Brilliant again, Jef! ..if I do tze so myself.
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    Realimaginary1 Premium Member almost 2 years ago

    If she walked with Marmaduke, it would probably be 7000 steps!

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    The Legend of Brandon Sawyer Premium Member almost 2 years ago

    You’re not gonna get a direct answer out of Frazz.

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    kenharkins  almost 2 years ago

    The Roman army mile was 1000 5ft paces. However, a pace was 2 steps, every time the left foot hit the ground was a pace. The English mile is based on 8 furlongs.

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    sandpiper  almost 2 years ago

    At her likely stride, between 3,500 and 4K. That is, if it’s all on the flats, and if she actually completes it. Depends on the distance between where she starts and the donut/coffee bar.

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    Meg: All Seriousness Aside  almost 2 years ago

    I guess my watch bases the steps per mile on the height I entered. It could be more accurate but a lot more work for the watch owner.

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    Meg: All Seriousness Aside  almost 2 years ago

    And +1 for “you don’t tze”.

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    unfair.de  almost 2 years ago

    And for Mrs. Olsen Frazz doesn’t count, either

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    Jhony-Yermo  almost 2 years ago

    Just walk 30 min like all us old coots should do each day. That should pretty closely equal at least a mile.

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    Flatlander, purveyor of fine covfefe  almost 2 years ago

    So this week was just a set up for a Lau Tzu joke??

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    Mel-T-Pass Premium Member almost 2 years ago

    The spirit of Pastis compels you.

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    Lenavid  almost 2 years ago

    Laosy pun…

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    yaakovashoshana  almost 2 years ago

    Actual steps per mile? Between 2,000 and 2,500. Steps counted by a fitness band? Between 1,000 and 2,000. That’s why your Fit Bit sets your goal at 10,000 steps (approx. 5 mi.) per day.

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    jconnors3954  almost 2 years ago

    Reaching.

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    The Orange Mailman  almost 2 years ago

    Neither do I.

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    Bilan  almost 2 years ago

    Is h—l freezing over? I ask because Mrs Olsen just made a pun.

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    Night-Gaunt49[Bozo is Boffo]  almost 2 years ago

    (The Chinese measurement term is “Li”.*

    Li (unit) – Wikipedia

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Li_(unit)

    Li (Chinese: 里, lǐ, or 市里, shìlǐ), also known as the Chinese mile, is a traditional Chinese unit of distance. The li has varied considerably over time but was usually about one third of an English mile and now has a standardized length of a half-kilometer (500 meters or 1,640 feet). This is then divided into 1,500 chi or “Chinese feet”. The character 里 combines the characters for “field” (田, tián) and “earth” (土, tǔ), since it was considered to be about the length of a single village. As late as the 1940s, a “li” did not represent a fixed measure but could be longer or shorter depending on the effort required to cover the distance. There is also another li (Traditional: 釐, Simplified: 厘, lí) that indicates a unit of length 1⁄1000 of a chi, but it is used much less commonly. This li is used in the People’s Republic of China as the equivalent of the centi- prefix in metric units, thus limi (厘米, límǐ) for centimeter. The tonal difference makes it distinguishable to speakers of Chinese, but unless specifically noted otherwise, any reference to li will always refer to the longer traditional unit and not to either the shorter unit or the kilometer. This traditional unit, in terms of historical usage and distance proportion, can be considered the East Asian counterpart to the Western league unit.

    It is a saying from China.

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    Kev_a_Swing_Dancer Premium Member almost 2 years ago

    I really laughed, this was so unexpected in Frazz. To me it was a perfect laugh-maker, mine was such a full, emotional experience (wonderful) that my experience of the past few months here disappeared totally from my mind and body.

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