united states customary system
Học thuậtThân thiện
A teacher points to a chart of the United States customary system on the classroom wall.
Definition
- Noun:
- A system of measurement: The United States Customary System is a complete set of standardized units for measuring quantities like length, weight, volume, and temperature. It is historically derived from the British Imperial System but has evolved distinct American standards.
- A specific historical system: It refers specifically to the system of weights and measures traditionally used in the United States, based on units such as the inch, foot, yard, mile, ounce, pound, pint, quart, gallon, and Fahrenheit degree.
Usage
The term "United States Customary System" is used as a proper noun to formally name the traditional measurement system of the United States. It is often used in technical, educational, and historical contexts to distinguish it from the metric system (SI).
Examples
- Noun:
- The recipe called for ingredients measured in the United States Customary System, so I needed a set of cups and spoons.
- While most countries use the metric system, the United States Customary System remains the primary system for everyday commerce and trade in the U.S.
- Students in American schools learn both the United States Customary System and the International System of Units (SI).
Advanced Usage
- "to exist side by side with": This phrase is commonly used when discussing the United States Customary System to describe its concurrent use with the metric system in science, industry, and some consumer goods.
- In the U.S. automotive industry, the United States Customary System exists side by side with SI; engine displacement may be listed in liters, while tire pressure is in psi (pounds per square inch).
Variants and Related Words
- Customary system (n): A common shortened form of the full name.
- The customary system uses inches and feet for length.
- USCS (n): A standard initialism for "United States Customary System."
- The abbreviation USCS is often used in engineering documents.
- Imperial system (n): The British system of measurements from which the US Customary System originated. They are similar but not identical (e.g., the US gallon and the imperial gallon are different volumes).
- English units (n): A historical term sometimes used interchangeably, though it can be ambiguous as it may refer to pre-imperial English units.
Synonyms
- American customary units: A clear synonym emphasizing the American context.
- Traditional U.S. units: A descriptive synonym highlighting the system's historical use.
Related Phrases
- Customary unit: Refers to any single unit within the United States Customary System, such as the mile, pound, or gallon.
- The acre is a customary unit of area.
A teacher points to a chart of the United States customary system on the classroom wall.
Noun
- the system of weights and measures based on the foot and pound and second and pint that dates back to colonial America but differs in some respects from the British Imperial System; today in the United States this system exists side by side with the SI system