Cycles per second called Hertz.
Feet per second square ARE the units in this case.
a. Meter per second and d. kg meter per second are SI units because they involve the base SI units meter (m) and kilogram (kg). b. Minute per meter, c. gram per second, and e. km per second are not SI units as they do not use the base SI units.
Acceleration
The units for acceleration in the MKS (meter-kilogram-second) system are meters per second squared (m/s^2). In the CGS (centimeter-gram-second) system, the units for acceleration are centimeters per second squared (cm/s^2).
That is the (approximate) Acceleration due to Gravity in English Units.
The units of omega in physics are radians per second.
Kilometres per second or metres per hour.
Velocity, the units are meters per second, or feet per second.
Velocity is commonly measured in miles per hour, or kilometers per hour, or feet per second, or meters per second. We could come up with other units, but those are the usual ones.
Speed can be measured in units such as meters per second (m/s) or kilometers per hour (km/h).
Kilometres per hour or miles per hour for a car. You could use the same units for runners but most would use metres per second or feet per second.
No. Pressure is force units divided by area units. Force units divided by temperature units would be... well, let's see, in the SI system forces are newtons, which are kilogram-meters per second per second, so force per unit temperature would be kilogram-meters per second per second per Kelvin. Hmm. Sorry, I don't think that directly rates to any simple concept. Entropy per meter? Thermal conductivity per hertz? The units work out right, but these are basically nonsense.