How many hands long do they get?
-
The British didn’t even begin to adopt the metric system until in the last third of the 20th century or so, and even then thr transition was not immediate.
Or complete
-
This post did not contain any content.
Shit, did we move on from Giraffes?
-
Yeah but the 800 hamburgers are including bones, how many legit venison burgers could you make out of a average deer?
I have seen American food standards, it’s 800.
-
37 degree commie = 98.6 degrees freedom.
310.15 degrees King
-
The British have a stupid mix of Imperial and metric. We usually measure distance in meters/centimeters but feet and inches are still used fairly regularly especially if you’re measuring the height of a person. Large distances are usually measured in miles unless you’re going for a run in which case you probably use km. Then you go for a drive and measure your speed in miles per hour, and your fuel efficiency in miles per gallon. Except you now need to fill up so you go to the petrol station where the prices are listed in pence per litre. Most other liquids are also measured in litres unless you’re buying milk or beer.
Then if you’re weighing things you probably use metric, unless you’re weighing a person or you’re an old person cooking. Temperature is also measured in celcius unless you’re old.
Beer depends on where you get it. Bottle/can? ml. Glass at the pub? Pint.
-
And the size of your land in acres/hectares. And a lot of ingredients in cups (which has never been a set amount in the UK since its beginning). And distance sometimes in yards
If you are nobility perhaps, I only have 37 miliacres if you combine the house as well as the garden.
-
Fair. I’ll acknowledge I’m biased here in retrospect. In particular, I’ve realized my argument for Fahrenheit (increased granularity) is directly contradictory to my argument against centimeters (too much granularity). Indeed, my view (however poorly conveyed) was that imperial units of length measurement, and the foot in particular, lend themselves to day to day estimation of size, as meters require estimation with fractions/decimals and centimeters require estimation in quantities too large to be reasonably accurate, so I was of the view that the lack of decimeters in common usage was a problem, but you make a good point that this is a fundamentally flawed assumption. After all, if you’re familiar with metric already, it’s not particularly difficult to just say ‘10cm’ and estimate in relation to tenths of a meter.
Well argued, and certainly more impassioned than my tepid defense of imperial. Consider me convinced; I’m switching teams lol.
Good! Here your kilo of sea-level water, use it wisely.
-
No, actually 12 inches in a foot goes hard. base 12 >>>>> base 10
I mean if we used 12 numerals it could be good, but we don’t, so…
-
I merely compared the idiotic randomness behind the imperial system to those behind my made up measurement system, showing that both are similarly stupid
You think you’re proving me wrong but you actually keep proving me right. Why is this so personal to you?
-
This post did not contain any content.
I’m just an American but I feel this is probably offensive to French people.
-
I mean if we used 12 numerals it could be good, but we don’t, so…
Even using 10 numerals, it’s way better for dividing. It divides into 2, 3, 4, and 6 evenly. You only get 2 and 5 with base 10 units.