Maeloch wrote:Like in a lot of ways, British people are someway between the US and europe. Despite taking pride in imperial measurements, most Brits don't realise how metrified they are - go to the US. They still use imperial in alot of fields brits have gone metric - science, engineering, etc., as in general use (would challenge most brits under 35 to understand a US weather forcast).
They don't have "Imperial" measurements in the US... well not strictly speaking. For example, a US Pint is slightly smaller than a British Pint (1 US pint = 0.8327 pint).
Not that I'm arguing against "Imperial" units. I think they are better in many ways than metric. Metric is fine if you are working in integers and multiples of 10, but when you need to work in fractions, Imperial makes more sense.
No matter what age you are, I bet most Brits (even under 35) would still give their height in feet and inches, their weight in Stones and Pounds, distances in miles and their drinks in Pints or Half-Pints.
I think that decimalisation is a "demon" that needs casting out.