Furryanimal
Y gath o Gymru
- Location
- Wales
I was taught in grade school that the word inch originated in England with the idiom "within an inch of his life" and the English measured standing-up things (mostly livestock) using their hands, and lying-down things (i.e., the length of a room) using their feet. And a stone-weight is a stone that's neither large nor small....you know, for accuracy.I still haven't embraced the Metric system. I can visualise feet and inches but not centimetres. I weigh out my baking ingredients in pounds and ounces and pints. My weight is in stones.
I know I'm not the only one because I watch the craft channels on tv and mostly the measurements are in Imperial.
I understand, its kind of like learning a new language as an adult, you may understand it but it just doesn't feel the same.I still haven't embraced the Metric system.
I almost mentioned in my post that our scientific community in America does most everything in metrics. In high school chemistry way back when, we used only metrics. It would seem strange to calculate the outcome of chemistry experiments in ounces. I'm not even sure how we would do that. That thought never even occurred to me until now.We use the metric system in medicine.
Same here, pretty much. I still think in Imperial. My Wunderground page is set to Fahrenheit.As a Canadian, I've been subject to the metric system since I was 15 years old, and still convert metric to imperial to visualize weights and measurement. Temperatures are easier. Calculating gas consumption is strictly miles/gallon, metric doesn't even compute, never could be bothered to make the conversion, guess it wasn't necessary.
I still measure myself in imperial. When I look at someone’s data on Wikipedia, it’s metric and I find myself converting. For example, 6 feet is 1.82m.; I just don’t visualize it.As a Canadian, I've been subject to the metric system since I was 15 years old, and still convert metric to imperial to visualize weights and measurement. Temperatures are easier. Calculating gas consumption is strictly miles/gallon, metric doesn't even compute, never could be bothered to make the conversion, guess it wasn't necessary.
I'm the same... I measure everything in imperial, and then change it to centimetres or metres... I weight everything in pounds and ounces still... .I still haven't embraced the Metric system. I can visualise feet and inches but not centimetres. I weigh out my baking ingredients in pounds and ounces and pints. My weight is in stones.
I know I'm not the only one because I watch the craft channels on tv and mostly the measurements are in Imperial.