A scale of one to ten or scale from one to ten is a general and largely vernacular concept used for rating things, people, places, ideas and so on. It is the naturally most popular choice of scale used in ordinary speech, followed by scales of one to five and then one to four. Scales to four or five are more likely to be represented in use by conceptual (or pictorial) 'stars', especially when used to rate books, films, music albums, concerts etc. and especially by the media. Scales from one to five are commonly used to rate hotels, and in this use it would be rare not to refer to them as 'stars'. From this we derive the idiomatic adjective 'five-star', meaning 'first-rate'. It seems that the choices of scales to five and to ten are influenced by the number of fingers on a hand, and the usual use of ten as a numerical base, which in turn is derived from the number of fingers on two hands.
It is interesting to note that people do use 'one' as the lower extremity of indeed any scale of this kind, and not nought, which could be easily used in its stead, and would be equally intuitive. However, it is common for people to extend the scale in any case, in the same way that the Burj al-Arab hotel in Dubai is commonly described as the world's only 'seven-star' hotel.
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"Scale of one to ten".
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