.matthew.
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Yes, plus Celius makes so much more sense than that other weird one that must not be namedI have a better relation with Celsius than I do with Meters.
Yes, plus Celius makes so much more sense than that other weird one that must not be namedI have a better relation with Celsius than I do with Meters.
Agreed. What about Chinese Imperial units? Ancient Egyptians and Israelites both used cubits, but they were different lengths. Before the French introduced the metric system, they used feet... but their feet were a bit longer than the English feet. What do your characters use?IMO, it doesn't matter what scientists, governments, or nations of your target audience uses... what would your characters use?
As an American not working in the medical field, hard sciences, nor the military, I intellectually understand the metric system... but I don't have any real practical knowledge. I kind of convert meters to yards to understand. But getting to longer distances, I don't have a clue as to the distance of 500 kilometers... I mean I'd guess it's around 300 miles. I do not know at all how much one kilogram is.The important thing isn't the unit of measurement, but what that unit of measurement conveys to the reader. This includes considering the setting and what fits the setting. If you were writing a medieval story and your characters were using meters it would feel "wrong" to many readers.
Overread said:The important thing isn't the unit of measurement, but what that unit of measurement conveys to the reader
Welcome to the Chrons!Hi all. I am new here, but IMO I think it depends on the context (historical, for example) and your target reader. Although I understand that to measure altitude feet and miles are used for the sea. In fact, a sailor talking about kilometres would look weird. I guess.
My sense is that you are in a substantial minority here. Meters are used even here in the States as the standard unit for track and field. Kilometers are used in signage and speedometers as a secondary. Tools, especially new ones, use centimeters and millimeters extensively. So it would be quite surprising if more people did not have some sense of distances using the metric system. But temperatures are nearly never given in Celsius here.For me, it's the opposite - which might be due to my background with computer management. I have a better relation with Celsius than I do with Meters.
It's interesting that as an extremely general rule*, SF stories tend to use metric measurements
And yes, I completely agree with you on this. Ultimately, I don't think its so significant a matter that it would cause a problem with either direction one goes, but we writers do rather like obsessing over such things don't we?
My sense is that you are in a substantial minority here.
10,000 km
-or-
10,000 km (6,000 mi)
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