CaptainBarnicles
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And Fanny's your Aunt!Bob’s your Uncle
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And Fanny's your Aunt!Bob’s your Uncle
also used to name various other things too.And Fanny's your Aunt!
Although we now have to measure humans in kg, a lot of us still prefer the pre-metric stones and pounds - much more meaningful than kg.One stone = 14 pounds, it's a measure commonly used to weight Wool.
A lot of TV shows made overseas that get shown in Australia have metric sizes and weights. The producers normally do multiple takes of the same scene for different regions around the world. For the US version of the show they use feet, inches and pounds. For Australia, New Zealand and various other countries they use metric (kilograms, meters).When I watch American films and a witness to a crime gives the perpetrator's weight in pounds, I have to divide by 14 to work out if he was skinny, overweight or somewhere between. Similarly, I have to divide his height by 12 to work out how tall he is as I work in feet and inches for height.
I just ask AlexaAlthough we now have to measure humans in kg, a lot of us still prefer the pre-metric stones and pounds - much more meaningful than kg.
When I watch American films and a witness to a crime gives the perpetrator's weight in pounds, I have to divide by 14 to work out if he was skinny, overweight or somewhere between. Similarly, I have to divide his height by 12 to work out how tall he is as I work in feet and inches for height.
I was brought up in pre-metric days and I work in both for different things. So body temperature is 37 deg C (in the biochem lab at university, we incubated tests at human body temp in deg C) but the mid 70's F is a warm summer's day. I think of fish tanks in cm as that's what they are labelled as in the UK, but for sewing I use inches. A seam in a dress is 5/8 inch not 1.5 cm. Fish tanks' volumes are litres, but cooking volumes are pints and fluid ounces.
In the UK, a pint is 20 fluid ounces. At school in the late 1950s/early 60s we were taught the mnemonic "a pint of water weighs a pound and a quarter". A quart is 2 pints or 40 fluid oz and an Imperial gallon is 8 pints or 160 fluid oz. That's why US and Imperial gallons are different, it due to the different pint volumes.