-- 3 pounds
-- 6 feet 4 inches
-- the whole 9 yards
-- 5 miles
-- 5 miles per hour
-- 10 gallons
-- 5 furlongs
-- 9 stone
-- 2 inches
-- 20 leagues
-- 8 ounces
-- a quarter cup
SECOND
The measurement system is in milliliters. Gallons are British (the Imperial system of measurement), or, slightly smaller, American. Gallons are not part of the metric system, thus are not measures in millilitres.
British linear measurement is feet and inches
The inch-pound system is commonly referred to as the English system of measurement or the British imperial system. It is a system of measurement where distances are measured in inches and weights are measured in pounds.
The Imperial units of measure are a combination of British and Roman units, that have been standardized over time. Go to the attached link titled "English Units", to learn a little more about various Imperial and other measures.
SECOND
The measurement system is in milliliters. Gallons are British (the Imperial system of measurement), or, slightly smaller, American. Gallons are not part of the metric system, thus are not measures in millilitres.
British linear measurement is feet and inches
The inch-pound system is commonly referred to as the English system of measurement or the British imperial system. It is a system of measurement where distances are measured in inches and weights are measured in pounds.
Myanmar formerly known as Burma uses the imperial system of measurement. It used to be a British colony and has not yet adopted the metric system.
The system of imperial units or the imperial system is the system of units first defined in the British Weights and Measures Act of 1824, which was later refined and reduced. The system came into official use across the British Empire.
old system of measurement English system of measurement
two units of measurements are MKS and CGS systems
The united states used the customary system when the british brought here before the revoluitionary war. only the us, UK, myanmar, and Liberia still use the systems of measurement.
The imperial system - so called because of its wide-spread use across the British Empire.
The system of measurement used across the British Empire. Now pretty much abandoned in favour of the metric system as what little is left of the British Empire is absorbed by a European federal state.
No. One fluid ounce equals about 28.4 ml (imp) or 29.5 ml (US)so 2 fl oz = 56.8 ml in the British measurement system or 61 ml in the US measurement system.