They are the U.S. measurements. Instead of the Metric system that uses meters, the Customary system uses feet and inches.
Metric measurements use powers of 10. Any other system has NO bases or logic.
I'm guessing by customary, you mean imperial. if so inches are customary/imperial
For a set of measurements, the mean valueis the sum of all the measurement values divided by the number of measurements in the set.
A million
Yes.
They are the U.S. measurements. Instead of the Metric system that uses meters, the Customary system uses feet and inches.
They use the metric system.
Metric measurements use powers of 10. Any other system has NO bases or logic.
600 millimeters in metric measurements is the equivalent of 23.622 inches in US customary measurements. One inch is the equivalent of 25.4 millimeters.
Customary System was developed from English units and later modified in the United States. These are the common measurements used in the US after America declared its independence.
The difference is the tranguillary measurements of the two said units
I'm guessing by customary, you mean imperial. if so inches are customary/imperial
Oh, dude, metric and customary measurements are like distant cousins who finally meet at a family reunion and realize they're not so different after all. They both help us measure stuff, like how tall Shaq is or how much ice cream we can eat before feeling guilty. So yeah, they're kind of like two sides of the same coin, just with different accents.
The Imperial system of measurements, originally used in England.
One US gallon of producer's milk (not skimmed, semi-skimmed, homogenised etc), weighs 10.1 pounds-force in customary measure and 44.5 newton in metric measure.
1 quart = 2 pints 1 pint = 0.5 quart