There are thousands of measurement units in both systems and it is not possible to list them all.
No, Foot belongs to the Imperial and US customary units (according to Wikipedia)
No, a gram is not a customary unit of measurement; it is part of the metric system. The customary units of measurement commonly used in the United States include ounces, pounds, and gallons. Grams are primarily used in scientific contexts and in most countries around the world for measuring weight.
The English system and the metric system.
You use conversion factors.
The MKS-ISO metric system and the CGS-ISO metric system. The American, Imperial, or customary units of measurement are not a system at all, they are an accumulation of antique units.
metric
using classical rather than metric units of measurement
Length can be measured using both metric and customary units. The metric system includes units such as meters and centimeters, while the customary system includes units like feet, inches, and miles. Both systems serve to quantify length, but they are based on different measurement standards.
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)
No, a gram is not a customary unit of measurement; it is part of the metric system. The customary units of measurement commonly used in the United States include ounces, pounds, and gallons. Grams are primarily used in scientific contexts and in most countries around the world for measuring weight.
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
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.
Customary Units