terrestrial time

English

Noun

terrestrial time

  1. A time standard proposed by Sandford Fleming in the late 19th century to replace Greenwich time and Paris time by one that is universally adopted.
    • 1879, Sanford Fleming, Uniform Non-local Time (terrestrial Time), page 23:
      Whenever exact time was required for any purpose, terrestrial time, assuming it to be in general use, would be available.
    • 2013, Luchien Karsten, Globalization and Time, page 17:
      Sanford Fleming, director of the Canadian Pacific Railway, insisted on the necessary introduction of a uniform time for the whole world: terrestrial time. Whereas Dowd's national system only encompassed North American railroads, Fleming's terrestrial time extended around the world and was called cosmopolitan time (Bartky 2007).
  2. (science fiction) Time based on the time system used on Earth, consisting of 24-hour days.

Proper noun

terrestrial time

  1. Alternative form of Terrestrial Time
This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.