So many here unable to see the reality. America has used two measures on their packaging for decades for domestic and export items. A great deal of what they ship north is bi and tri lingual on the packaging. Yet the weak knees in Europe who cannot really even use one correctly, like to slag them. Truth is to convert road signs to metric would cost several trillion dollars and no one is gonna add that to the debt. I think Americans do just fine with either one just like older Canadians. And while we say we are metric a great many of our products like construction goods are imperial. We embrace the hybrid just like the USA does.
Learned metric almost 50 years ago in the 7th grade. When the class realized how easy it was, one student asked the teacher why the US had not converted to metric. The teacher gave and honest and matter of fact answer: “Because we’re stupid.”
It always seems odd to me when I see pills dosages listed at 1000 mg, I guess just saying 1 g sounds boring? Maybe they should say 1 billion ng to get people thinking it is really strong?
A ten gallon hat is a misnomer. The gallon in “ten-gallon hat” came from the Spanish “galón“ meaning “braid“, so a ten-gallon hat is a hat with a braiding around the brim and did not refer to the holding capacity of the hat.
basilisk almost 4 years ago
Parochial Merkins pretending they aren’t behind literally the entire rest of the world.
Liverlips McCracken Premium Member almost 4 years ago
No. I mean let’s go get a freakin’ pint.
unfair.de almost 4 years ago
A Pint is not a freakin’ halfliter on anorexia. It’s 568 ml!
superkrispy almost 4 years ago
They may take our lives, but they’ll never make us go METRIC!
walstib Premium Member almost 4 years ago
MY wife and I were raised in different religions, but neither of us ever converted to our spouse’s religion. (Horrors, a mixed marriage!!)
Jeffin Premium Member almost 4 years ago
That guy’s all hat and no calamari.
Jeffin Premium Member almost 4 years ago
And that beaver…Dam!
Zebrastripes almost 4 years ago
Oy!
LOLBeth almost 4 years ago
A league is a unit of distance, not depth — need to convert it to kilometers.
i_am_the_jam almost 4 years ago
Feh. Give them 2.54 cm and they’ll take 1.609344 km.
formathe almost 4 years ago
So many here unable to see the reality. America has used two measures on their packaging for decades for domestic and export items. A great deal of what they ship north is bi and tri lingual on the packaging. Yet the weak knees in Europe who cannot really even use one correctly, like to slag them. Truth is to convert road signs to metric would cost several trillion dollars and no one is gonna add that to the debt. I think Americans do just fine with either one just like older Canadians. And while we say we are metric a great many of our products like construction goods are imperial. We embrace the hybrid just like the USA does.
Bex Premium Member almost 4 years ago
Learned metric almost 50 years ago in the 7th grade. When the class realized how easy it was, one student asked the teacher why the US had not converted to metric. The teacher gave and honest and matter of fact answer: “Because we’re stupid.”
dv almost 4 years ago
It always seems odd to me when I see pills dosages listed at 1000 mg, I guess just saying 1 g sounds boring? Maybe they should say 1 billion ng to get people thinking it is really strong?
Ed The Red Premium Member almost 4 years ago
And I would walk 800 kilometers
And I would walk 800 more
Just to be the man who walks 1600 kilometers
To fall down at your door
zeexenon almost 4 years ago
Heck, let’s go get a whole liter….
JHL1 almost 4 years ago
Hmmm… nobody pointing out that yard is not a unit of distance in this context?
oldwolf1951 almost 4 years ago
A ten gallon hat is a misnomer. The gallon in “ten-gallon hat” came from the Spanish “galón“ meaning “braid“, so a ten-gallon hat is a hat with a braiding around the brim and did not refer to the holding capacity of the hat.
Impkins Premium Member almost 4 years ago
Okay Ralph. burp. :)
DCBakerEsq almost 4 years ago
Geez. Try walking a kilometer in my shoes.
dpatrickryan Premium Member almost 4 years ago
I’ll take a real pint, please, not one of those undersized Yank ones.
Superfrog almost 4 years ago
Of course, if the Ancient Romans had modernized and dumped the Sextarius (1.14 pints or .546 liters) they might still be a super power.
lv2sew almost 4 years ago
Tire sizes use both, as do socket sets. The drive is always imperial- 1/4", 1/2", etc.
Bing43 almost 4 years ago
All the world uses metric, the one that doesn’t, put a man on the moon.