In most countries, it is customary to measure that in liters.
The united states used the customary system when the british brought here before the revoluitionary war. only the us, UK, myanmar, and Liberia still use the systems of measurement.
All of them. Whatever units a country uses are 'customary' in that country.
It depends on the length that you wish to measure: a mile, furlong, chain, fathom, yard, foot, inch are all possibilities.
We, who do not live in the US don't!
Liberia US Burma (Myanmar)
Officially, three do: Myanmar, Liberia, and the USA.
Some countries in Africa used the customary legal system. They usually use a combination of a customary system and a civil code.
The troglodyte three: USA, Burma and Liberia. However, some other countries do still use the customary system for specific measures.
The UK uses the predecessor to US Customary called 'Imperial' - most of which is identical apart from volume measures.
The United States is one of the few countries that officially uses both the metric and customary system of measurement. Myanmar uses a combination of both systems as well.
Countries that still predominantly use customary units of measurement include the United States, Liberia, and Myanmar. Although the metric system is the official system in these countries, some customary units are still commonly used in daily life.
There is only one country which is the United States of America.
Only the U.S.A. uses the customary system. Myanmar(Burma) and Liberia both use the old UK Imperial system, which uses the same names for units as the customary, but assigns them different sizes. The whole of the rest of the world uses metric.
Gramm (g) Weird countries sometimes use other units such as ounces or pounds.
In most countries, it is customary to measure that in liters.
Gramm (g) Weird countries sometimes use other units such as ounces or pounds.