The international system of units.
it cannot be mixed but it can be convert from SI--> CGS and CGS-->SI
SI stands for Système international, which is French for international system. This is due to its origin and the fact that the SI is controlled by a French organisation.
The International System of Units, abbreviated "SI" from the French Le Système International d'Unités, is the modern form of the metric system.
Its SI unit is Ampere metre or Am.
The SI, or International System.
I think you are referring to SI, the international standard of measurement units agreed upon by the international scientific community. SI does not stand for the metric system per se, but it is not surprising that all of the SI units are metric since the world's preference for the metric system is almost universal. Currently there are only three countries in which the metric system is not the standard system of measurements.
If you are referring to the SI system, then the unit for capacity (volume) is the cubic metre. The litre is a metric unit that may be used 'alongside' the SI system, but it is not an SI unit.Yet another answerPersonally I'd say gram, but I think the second answer is best for this one. It's volume. CommentA gram is a submultiple of the SI base unit for mass, the kilogram.
Provided you are referring to an Indonesian translation "si kokot" means the staples.
si units are based on the metric system system international (French) international system (English)
International System of Units (SI)
SI is also known as The International System of Units Please, do not mistake SI for the former, now obsolete, designation 'metric system'
The SI, of course!The SI, of course!The SI, of course!The SI, of course!
SI (French abbreviation for "International System") is, in English, the metric system. So the standard measure in SI is the meter.
not sure what reports its referring to
No, pounds and inches are not part of the SI (International System of Units). The SI system uses kilograms for mass and meters for length.
First, it's "to" not "too." Second, what are you trying to ask?
The base unit of time in the SI system is the second.