If I ask you what time it is in Katmandu you’d have to know three things:
1) Where you were in terms of timezone offset from UTC.
2) Where Katmandu was in terms of timezone offset from UTC.
3) What time it was in either UTC or “here”.
Well, alternatively you could happen to have the second timezone on your watch set for Katmandu, which would imply those.
If you did not have those you would say “I have no idea” or ask for information about Katmandu or you’d sit down and think about where Katmandu was and work a timezone offset from that to get a rough idea. Because you think about problems and want to be correct because correctness is useful.
If you asked a random middle of the curve type who didn’t like saying “I don’t know”, they would (and you see this all the time on “man on the street” interviews) make shit up. There are many people in this world who do not care about correctness for the sake of understanding the world, they care about correctness for signaling purposes. They would rather be thought smart than actually be smart as sometimes if you’re smart you know things that everyone else things aren’t true (see the history of “bacteria causes ulcers” for example).
So no, you do NOT have to know what those words mean to answer the question. You have to know what they mean to understand the question and to answer it correctly.
“Even a blind pig finds a truffle once and a while”.
Edited to add:
As to learning it in elementary school—for most of the people in this country that was a LONG time ago and those lessons just weren’t relevant to their lives, so they forgot them.
If I ask you what time it is in Katmandu you’d have to know three things:
1) Where you were in terms of timezone offset from UTC. 2) Where Katmandu was in terms of timezone offset from UTC. 3) What time it was in either UTC or “here”.
Well, alternatively you could happen to have the second timezone on your watch set for Katmandu, which would imply those.
If you did not have those you would say “I have no idea” or ask for information about Katmandu or you’d sit down and think about where Katmandu was and work a timezone offset from that to get a rough idea. Because you think about problems and want to be correct because correctness is useful.
If you asked a random middle of the curve type who didn’t like saying “I don’t know”, they would (and you see this all the time on “man on the street” interviews) make shit up. There are many people in this world who do not care about correctness for the sake of understanding the world, they care about correctness for signaling purposes. They would rather be thought smart than actually be smart as sometimes if you’re smart you know things that everyone else things aren’t true (see the history of “bacteria causes ulcers” for example).
So no, you do NOT have to know what those words mean to answer the question. You have to know what they mean to understand the question and to answer it correctly.
“Even a blind pig finds a truffle once and a while”.
Edited to add:
As to learning it in elementary school—for most of the people in this country that was a LONG time ago and those lessons just weren’t relevant to their lives, so they forgot them.