Exactly.
Just multiply inches by 2.54 and you will get centimeters
Feet multiplied by point-three-o-five will give you equivalent meters
You multiply pounds by .45 and you’ll get kilograms it’s true
A gallon times three-point-seventy nine will turn to liters for you
[and others]
There are two types of countries.
Those that use the metric system,
And those that have walked on the Moon.
Don’t even get me started on the bookshelves.
Honestly I’m fairly confident that non-Americans do not care what system is currently used in the US (unless they’re involved in the country in some matter). But the simplest explainer scale I know of is the following[ul]
[li]<0°C Freezing[/li][li]10°C Cold[/li][li]20°C Warm[/li][li]30°C Hot[/li][/ul]
There’s even a simple rhyme for tots; 30 is hot, 20 is nice, 10 is cold, 0 is ice.
I’m American. I’m also a retired high school science teacher. Therefore, yardsticks feel short to me. If someone states a distance or length in centimeters or meters, I automatically get a decent mind’s eye image of it. I can teach anyone how to have a basic feel for the SI units in just a few minutes if one is interested. The definitions for inches, feet, and miles have been legally defined in metric units in this country for over a century. I’d be favorably impressed by a fellow American casually using metric units.
/nitpicks
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The metric system is now known as International System of Units (SI) … well actually since 1960 but “it’s tasking longer than we thought” to get everyone to just to metrify, let alone change the name.
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Celsius (Centigrade scale) IS part of the metric or SI
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While the U.S. has not officially adopted the SI, it is being used in many industries. Contrarily, Canada, the U.K, et al. have only adopted partial metrification which creates a complex system of weights, measures, etc… depending on the product, industry, etc…
As a contractor, I prefer the imperial system or USCS. It’s what I know, I can do the math faster, I can visualize plans better, and I can estimate sizes easier. With a tape measure, I can read, calculate, and mark measurements much faster I know instinctively which wrench/socket will fit a bolt and know exactly how long a screw or nail is, on sight.
Is this learned behaviour? Some of it… but the SI system has it’s limitations and I don’t see many of my trades willing to metrify any time soon.
Of course, sometimes you do run into metric, so you need to have those mm wrenches, sockets, Allen keys, etc. on hand… and pray someone hasn’t lost your 10mm again!
Interestingly, the one other hold out I’ve noticed is that most people (I know anyway) still use Fahrenheit on their oven thermostat, even when there is an option to set it to Celsius.
What type of feed do you use?![]()
Is the 3 spaces after a period a metric space, I’ve only seen 1, or 2 by ancient people? ![]()
To be clear: the US does not and has never used Imperial measurements. US contemporary, which are similar, but completely different when talking about liquid measures.
The UK is just waking up, but they use miles and pints, alongside feet, inches, and pounds in some contexts. Alongside stones. Australia and Ireland have some non-metric as well. Meanwhile all US packaging has metric measurements alongside ounces/fluid ounces. IOW, these things aren’t cut and dried.
Although it’s metric/SI, around about 1/2" is still the size that’s used most often: the one you want is your 13mm spanner.
That 0 and 100 correspond to freezing and boiling. And there’s no loss of precision, but there is one capital C and two little s’s: Celsius.
There’s a British guy – see link below, which I hope will work – who would I think, in his self-conferred role as defender of old-fashioned measuring ways: regret your described “making-over” efforts. However, IMO Rees-Mogg is himself the ultimate poster child for pretentious twittishness, but of the backward-looking kind (in everything, not just methods of measuring stuff.)
Not sure what part of Canada you’re in, but in Ontario, the use of non-metric units is still alive and well. I might confuse people with my US-sized gallons, but other than that, it would generally not be a problem.
FWIW, I’m pretty much metric in my daily life, just because it’s convenient. Other than mile post markers, the USA is already pretty much metric, for those who want to be. I mean, what more do metric people want? Violate free speech by forcing publishers to ship only metric cook books?
We could mandate that auto speedometers are metric, and change our signs, but that doesn’t really make us any more competitive with the rest of the world.
Every time there’s a “we should become metric” thread, I always ask, “what does it mean to become metric”? No one ever really answers.
Oh, and to the OP, depending on context, yeah, using metric units sounds pretentious. For me, switching units is just part of the normal code-switching of my everyday language.
ummm…it’s gonna get really confusing if yourefer to beverage sizes in kilometers.
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:dubious:
Sort of a jerk response to a genuine question, but go ahead and make fun of the dyslexic who was relying on auto correct.
I prefer being a pretentious troll and have taken a page out of Jeremy Clarkson’s book (a master troll). I give whatever measurement I’m giving: temperature, volume, distance, time, whatever, and then convert it to the other system in a very patronizing voice. “St. Louis? Oh yes that’s 850 miles, or 6,582 kilometers.” That way I can sound like a pretentious twat and still imply my certainty that you are a moron.
If you act like you think 850 miles is 6,582 km, most of my 9th grade physical science students would look at you with snarky expressions, and remind you that 1 km is about 5/8 of a mile. I guesstimated 850 mi at 1400 km, and it’s really 1360. Yep, if you said “St. Louis? Oh yes that’s 850 miles, or 6,582 kilometers”, I’d call you on it.
An experiment:
I want every one of youse to go into your local supermarket. Go to the head of the soda-pop aisle and holler down, “Get me a half-gallon of Birch Beer, would ya?”
Now, who’s the twit? 
Everything you need to know about the evils of colonization right there.
Just for the sake of being an argumentative bitch : it’s not the sum total, it’s the distribution. My favourite Chinese (Mandarin) teacher used to quip that you can get by speaking Chinese exclusively just about anywhere in the entire world ; simply because if it’s a physical geographical location that has breathable air there’s a Chinese community living there and they’ll sort you out like you’re long lost cousins, no worries.