kg, m, and s. They stand for kilogram, meter, and second.
Meter, kilogram, and second. There's an argument for liters, but it is really just cubic meters.
My list would be: 1. meter 2. Newton 3. kg 4. volt 5. coulomb 6. second 7. Celsius (temperature.)
Liberia, Myanmar, and the United States
SI units
SI units are defined for physical measurements, like measurements of mass, length, etc. - there are no specific SI units for plain numbers.SI units are defined for physical measurements, like measurements of mass, length, etc. - there are no specific SI units for plain numbers.SI units are defined for physical measurements, like measurements of mass, length, etc. - there are no specific SI units for plain numbers.SI units are defined for physical measurements, like measurements of mass, length, etc. - there are no specific SI units for plain numbers.
There are 7 basic units
The basic unit for length in SI is the meter.
Yes. It is one of the 7 basic units of the SI.Yes. It is one of the 7 basic units of the SI.Yes. It is one of the 7 basic units of the SI.Yes. It is one of the 7 basic units of the SI.
the metre
"The" 3 basic units is wrong; the SI has SEVEN base units: kilogram, meter, second, ampere, candela, kelvin, mole.
It's the "second".
The kilogram is one of the 7 basic units of the SI (the current metric system).
The meter in the SI, the foot in the Imperial system.
The seven basic units are: metre, kilogram, second, ampere, candela, mole, kelvin.
Perhaps you refer to the seven basic SI units? The number and choice of base units depends on the system used. In the case of SI, you can find the base units here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SI_base_unit
Time and temperature are quantities to be measured. The SI units for time and temperature are the second and the kelvin, respectively.
Basic quantities refers to the quantities from which the others are derived from. This is what is commonly referred to as SI units.