deird1: Spike looking at Harmony, with text "you were meant for me; perhaps as punishment (Spike Harmony punishment)
[personal profile] deird1
Does everyone in non-Australia seriously call them twin beds?

Twin? Really?

Single/double works so well. Twin/double is more... aren't they the same? It sounds weird.

I'm rather confused.

Date: 2016-01-01 08:21 pm (UTC)
beroli: (Default)
From: [personal profile] beroli
I think the idea is that they assume you're getting bed(s) for two people, so if you're getting one "twin" bed, you're getting two, thus twins. (Or at least, they'd rather sell you two than one.)
Edited Date: 2016-01-01 08:21 pm (UTC)

Date: 2016-01-01 08:28 pm (UTC)
petzipellepingo: (us flag by eyesthatslay)
From: [personal profile] petzipellepingo
A bed that can fit one person is called a twin and people used to buy two of them for two siblings (twin or otherwise), a bed that could fit two people (this is years ago mind you) is called a double bed. There were no queen or king beds when all of this naming started.

Date: 2016-01-01 10:02 pm (UTC)
rebcake: Spike: What? (ats Spike what?)
From: [personal profile] rebcake
I am curious about this "king single". Smaller than a double?

Here in Cali, we have"

Twin
Twin XL (extra long, usually found in dorm rooms)
double (which is not double the size of a twin)
queen
king (aka Eastern or standard king)
California king (Western king, 4 inches longer and 4 inches narrower than a standard king)

Date: 2016-01-01 11:56 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] charliefred.blogspot.com
King singles are longer than singles. Queens and Kings are longer than Doubles and Singles, too. :)

Sue Ellen

Date: 2016-01-02 12:51 am (UTC)
lizbee: (Avatar: Toph is a bandit)
From: [personal profile] lizbee
It's rare, but we also have a queen single.

I had a queen single waterbed as a kid (Mum got them cheap, and figured they'd be good for my arthritis), and while getting linen for it was a pain (I think we mostly made do with double-bed stuff), I still miss it. (The bladder died after about ten years, and replacing it would have cost more than buying a new double waterbed.)

Date: 2016-01-01 08:52 pm (UTC)
curiouswombat: (Default)
From: [personal profile] curiouswombat
We currently have two, identical, single beds in our two, smallish, spare bedrooms. We hope to move house and will then put them side by side in one room as a spare bedroom - and at that point I will probably tell people that our spare bedroom has twin beds...

Date: 2016-01-01 09:05 pm (UTC)
petzipellepingo: (us flag by eyesthatslay)
From: [personal profile] petzipellepingo
Best Friend has two twin beds put together for her and her husband because they have different mattress requirements. She uses queen sheets and blankets to cover both of them.

Date: 2016-01-01 10:02 pm (UTC)
curiouswombat: (wombat)
From: [personal profile] curiouswombat
It's odd the differences in language that means we seem to mean the same things - but don't, between the US, Australia, Canada and the UK.

In our word usage a queen sized sheet wouldn't fit a pair of twins as a single is 3feet wide - so two of them would be 6feet wide. But a king sized bed is only 5 feet wide - so a queen sized bed to me is a standard 4foot 6inch double!

Date: 2016-01-01 09:57 pm (UTC)
curiouswombat: (gateway)
From: [personal profile] curiouswombat
Thank you - and yes, that would baffle me a bit, too!

Date: 2016-01-01 09:27 pm (UTC)
velvetwhip: (Default)
From: [personal profile] velvetwhip
I am so used to calling them twin beds... possibly because my sister and I had them and there were two of them and it made sense to me until you called it into question.


Gabrielle

Date: 2016-01-01 11:17 pm (UTC)
jesuswasbatman: (Default)
From: [personal profile] jesuswasbatman
Speaking as a UK person, I refer to the items of furniture as "single beds". "Twin beds" is a phrase, used mostly in a hotel context, to refer to two separate single beds in the same room.

Date: 2016-01-02 01:59 am (UTC)
immer_am_lesen: (Default)
From: [personal profile] immer_am_lesen
Odd. 'Single' makes much more sense, to me.

Single person = single bed. (though Double bed isn't *really* for two people, unless you really like cuddling all the time...)

Calling them 'twin' beds makes sense if you have two and are putting them side-by-side, as my parents do, so each has a mattress-hardness to suit personal needs. Otherwise, single all the way. :)

Laney says, "...whaaa?"

Date: 2016-01-07 11:17 pm (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
Seriously?
If I go and buy ONE bed for ONE person, that bed's called a TWIN?
Surely twin beds implies that there have to be two beds present?
I have three boys. It'd be ludicrous to call any one of them a twin unless they had arrived in a pair - no pair, not a twin. Isn't that what 'twin' MEANS?

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