There are many of them. Here are a few:
-- yoctosecond
-- femtosecond
-- picosecond
-- nanosecond
-- microsecond
-- millisecond
-- second
-- minute
-- hour
-- day
-- week
-- fortnight
-- year
-- Century
-- eon
There are several standard metric units, for measuring different things.There are several standard metric units, for measuring different things.There are several standard metric units, for measuring different things.There are several standard metric units, for measuring different things.
There are thousands of different units for measuring hundreds of different attributes. The question needs to be a bit more specific.There are thousands of different units for measuring hundreds of different attributes. The question needs to be a bit more specific.There are thousands of different units for measuring hundreds of different attributes. The question needs to be a bit more specific.There are thousands of different units for measuring hundreds of different attributes. The question needs to be a bit more specific.
There are different units for measuring different attributes.
It depends on what you are measureing. If you are measuring distance the mathematical untis would be meters or feet. If you are measuring time the units would be seconds. If you were measuring mass the units would be grams. If you were measuring speed the units would be a combination of distance and time which is meters per seconds or feet per seconds. Mathematical units just tell what variation a certain number has. Ex. 3meters 3feet 3yards these are have the same number but different units and therefore that means they are all different measurements. It all depends on the units.
No. Those two units are for measuring completely different - and incompatible - things.
There are different units for measuring different characteristics: mass, weight, length, area, volume, temperature and so on.
They both measure the length of a material. They just have different units and conversions.
i dint really care
millisecond, hour, and seconds.
millisecond, hour, and seconds.
The 2 units for measuring current are: Ampere Milliampere
more smaller units than the bigger units