Inches and feet measure length in standard units, in metric meters and centimeters measure length.
Inches, and secondary are portions of an inch up to a foot.
Though there is no exact Imperial equivalent to the metre the SI units of measurement are replacing the Imperial units as they are more convenient and self consistent.
No it is not metric unit. It is foot-pound-sec unit. Psi is pound per square inch.
The English unit for measuring distance is inch, foot, yard, and/or mile
A litre is a unit of capacity. A foot is a unit of distance. The two units are therefore incompatible.
NO Such unit as 'Metric Inches'. In the metric system of linear measure, the unit is 'centimetres / metres'. In the Imperial System of linear measure, the unit is inches / feet. Next you are referring to linear measure, then at the end refer to volume measure; 'Cubic feet', Please clarify your question.
Inches, and secondary are portions of an inch up to a foot.
kilometer, meter, centimeter, millimeter mile, foot, inch
One foot = 12 inches so the foot is longer than the inch
Square foot unit is the unit area. The unit is inches. These two are not comparable.
Examples: mile, cup, grain, stone, pound foot, yard, inch, ounce, pint, etc.
If you mean tools then: -Ruler -Tape Measurer Etc If you mean unit then: -Centimeter/Milimeter/Meter -Inch/Foot
An inch is a unit of length, whereas a quart is a unit of volume. The two units are, therefore, incompatible. A comparable unit to the imperial unit the quart is, for example, the cubic inch.
An inch is a unit of length. A foot pound is a unit of pressure. The two units are therefore incompatible.
First, a square is a two-dimensional form, a cube is three-dimensional, and feet is a lineal measurement, ie., one-dimension, so no number of feet will ever equal a square or a cube. An inch is 1/12 of a foot. A square inch is 1/144 of a square foot. A cubic inch is 1/1728 of a cubic foot.
foot is the most precise way to measure any unit
A square unit is a measure of area, a foot is a linear unit. There are no area units in any linear measure.