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A person who winds clocks is commonly referred to as a clockmaker or a horologist.
The term "clocks" likely comes from the Middle English word "clokke," which originated from the Latin word "clocca" meaning "bell." Clocks used to primarily consist of mechanisms with bells to indicate time, thus the name stuck.
Clocks is already in plural form. Therefore, it is clocks.
Yes, clocks work in China just like in any other country. China uses Standard Time which is offset by 8 hours from Coordinated Universal Time (UTC+8) throughout the country.
Before electricity, clocks used various mechanisms to keep time such as pendulums or springs. Mechanical clocks would need to be regularly wound up to store energy and keep the clock running accurately. Water clocks and sundials were also used in ancient times to measure time without electricity.
I wouldn't say the inventor, had a reason for calling clocks clocks, the person in which invented clocks came up with the name himself
Analog clocks.
A quarrel of clocks
A person who winds clocks is commonly referred to as a clockmaker or a horologist.
The term "clocks" likely comes from the Middle English word "clokke," which originated from the Latin word "clocca" meaning "bell." Clocks used to primarily consist of mechanisms with bells to indicate time, thus the name stuck.
they are called daily schedule clocks
they dont
A person who works on both clocks and watches or watches alone (for some reason) is called a Horologist. But I have been told by a French man who has four generations of watch/clockmakers in his family that a clockmaker that only works on clocks is called a Pendulier (can't find the correct spelling)
Some clocks are called chiming clocks because they give off a chiming, or striking, sound at various times. A striking, or chiming, clock sounds the hours audibly by using a bell or a gong.
A person who makes clocks.
Horologist .
Horologist .