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UK is weirder. Most stuff is metric. Very little is sold by Imperial (what the Americans based their system on.) But Milk is sold in both metric and imperial. People still talk about buying "pints" of milk, (a pint being 1/8 of a imperial gallon, but slightly more than a US pint), so much so that "a couple of pints of milk" often equates to a litre, even though that's less than 2 pints in reality. Beer is always sold in pints too, but spirits are metric. Weight is almost universally measured in metric, except for human weight. That is measured in Stones (a Stone being 14 pounds - this confuses many Americans, we tend to use the phrase "9 stone weakling" where as the US use something like 100 pounds IIRC). Height is almost always metric with anyone under 40, but human height is feet and inches. Distance is always Imperial.




Member since:
2006-01-27
It is weird how we use a kooky mix of metric and imperial. Scientists use the metric system, of course. And everyone knows what a liter is since sodas have been sold in liter and 2-liter jugs for some time.
But gas and milk, gallons only. Traveling distance is miles, nothing else. And all construction (that I've seen) is inches and feet.