who invented the english measurements
The English system and the metric system.
Both systems have measurements for distance, area, volume, and mass or weight.
First: there is no such thing as English measurement.Second: Imperial measures are used for measuring things; nothing measures them!
There is no inherent preference in the use of "English" measurements - miles and pounds - to "SI" ("Systeme Internationale") measurements - meters and grams - other than that the use of SI measurements made the calculations easier, back in the days before computers. Now with computers, there is nothing to argue for either way.
who invented the english measurements
how much in English is 200 ml
The English system and the metric system.
Both systems have measurements for distance, area, volume, and mass or weight.
Metric units of measurement are more fun to say.
Two types of measurements are qualitative measurements, which describe the quality or characteristics of an object without using numbers, and quantitative measurements, which involve numerical values or quantities to describe an object's attributes.
First: there is no such thing as English measurement.Second: Imperial measures are used for measuring things; nothing measures them!
It is a Greek word meaning 'earth or land measurements'
A pound is part of the imperial system of measurements, which were used in England, and elsewhere, before the introduction of metric measurements.
It is meter,liter,gram
i searched it up through books and i found that it was Metric
It is 1.35 millimetres thick.