
Phil Endecott wrote:
- Am I the only person who uses capital letters for units named after people? Hmm, maybe I am. Probably not, but anybody who does for SI units is wrong :-). Units named after people are spelt with a lower case letter (eg newton, watt), but their symbol is an upper case letter (eg N, W).
- Please don't call the units used in the U.S. "English" units. Here in England, we use the S.I. system for everything except pints of beer and miles on roadsigns. a) You are on a loser here. The system is called "English" in the US (and there are more of them than there are of us). (For another example, the "English Muffin" is nothing like any item of food you can find in the UK.) b) The situation is /much/ more complex than that. I buy my petrol in litres, but still think in consumption in mpg. I measure carpentry in inches and mm depending on which gives the roundest number. I am just starting to weigh out 250g flour to make pastry rather than 8oz. I have posted to a newsgroup "How much rock for a rockery on a slope two feet high, 12.5 metres long?".
The units that we did use here until about 50 years ago The change is much more recent than that. We were taught SI in science 30 years ago, but almost everything was done in Imperial. My son on the other hand, can barely visualize an inch. were not the same as the ones that the Americans use. It's only the volume that is different (afaik).
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