The Centimeter
The Centimeter
Only if you live in a country which uses obsolete measurement i=units (US). In the developed world, the appropriate unit is a centimetre.
The liter is classed as a non-SI unit accepted for use with the SI. Being one thousandth of a cubic meter, the liter is not a coherent unit of measure with respect to SI.
Internationally, metres is the accepted unit of measure. However, in some areas of the world (cough...the United States...cough), people use feet and inches in combination with one another. When in doubt about length, always use metres; it is the SI unit of length. Hope this helps! -ubermensch00
There is only one unit of measure for current: the ampere. All currents are measured in amps or fractions of amps or their equivalent.
The international standard for liter is defined as a unit of volume equal to one cubic decimeter (1 L = 1 dm³). It is used to measure liquids and is widely accepted around the world as a standard unit of volume.
milliliters, deciliters, litersAnswer:The official SI unit for volume is the cubic meter. Surprisingly, the liter is not the official SI unit of volume, although is is commonly accepted as such and used with metric prefixes.
First of all it's "What unit of measurement would you use to measure the diameter of a drink can?" Secondly you would probably use either centimeters or inches, depending on where you are in the world.
America uses feet; the rest of the world uses meters.
In math and in almost all other countries, the typical units of measure are metric units of measure
As far as I am aware, CO is not a unit of measure.
A unit can be a measure of length. It is one-dimensional. A squared unit can be a measure of area. It is two-dimensional. A cubic unit can be a measure of volume. It is three-dimensional.