No, Foot belongs to the Imperial and US customary units (according to Wikipedia)
The English system and the metric system.
The two types of system measurement are qualitative, which involves descriptions or subjective evaluations, and quantitative, which involves numerical values or measurements.
You use conversion factors.
Metric measurement is measurement made using units as defined under the metric system.
metric
using classical rather than metric units of measurement
A Customary Unit or non-SI unit is a measurement unit that is not part of the metric system. Customary units are mainly units of the Imperial system but they could be localised customary units - such as Gaj (for area) is South Asia.
Feet are a measurement in the Imperial system. If she was using Metric it would be in meters, not feet.
SI units is what we use in the United States for the common unit of measurement for matter.
No, Foot belongs to the Imperial and US customary units (according to Wikipedia)
The customary units are ones we use everyday. metric units usually have the word meter on it. my teacher taught me meter metric no meter no metric.
Tape measure
Customary Units
A formula is neither metric nor customary. Sometimes the same formula will apply for both systems, only the units will change: for example, average speed = distance/time. In other cases the coefficients may change.
The English system and the metric system.
The two types of system measurement are qualitative, which involves descriptions or subjective evaluations, and quantitative, which involves numerical values or measurements.