I have seen fresh flowers (esp. roses) sold by length in cm only, no
English.

Howard Ressel
Project Design Engineer, Region 4
(585) 272-3372

>>> "John S. Ward" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 10/07/03 11:38PM >>>
On Tuesday 07 October 2003 11:47, john mercer wrote:
> Hello everyone.  Could anyone tell me if in the U S there are any
food
> products that are packaged with only metric units on the package.  I
see
> there is going to be another meeting on Nov. 6 03, I hope it goes
well. 
> Another question in the States is meat packaged by the lb?  In Canada
meat
> is packaged in metric but sold by the the lb.  Actually it's packaged
in
> metric and advertised in dual units. When you get a grocery store
flyer in
> Canada meat and produce are advertised   in dual units, with the lb
price
> in larger letters and the metric units in small letters.

Hello John,

Our grocery store in Los Angeles (Ralph's, the biggest supermarket
chain in 
the U.S., I think) does not sell any meats by metric units.  Fresh meat

packages do not even have metric unit equivalents, either for the
price, or 
for the mass.  Even many packaged meats (like Oscar Meyer lunch meats
and hot 
dogs) don't have metric labeling.

At Ralph's, there are many spring scales for weighing fruit and
vegetables.  
These scales are pounds only.  They don't give metric equivalents. 
Fresh 
fruits and vegetables are sold by the pound only, with no metric
pricing 
equivalents given.

There are also electronic deli scales.  Once again, pounds and ounces
only, no 
grams or kg.

On the bright side, I've noticed that wine and spirits are usually sold
METRIC 
ONLY.  Bottled water is usually sold hard-metric, with traditional 
equivalents given.

Most other packaged foods are sold hard-traditional, with metric
equivalents 
given in smaller print.  On the bright side, there are plenty of foods
sold 
hard metric with soft traditional conversions.  I've noticed this with
pasta, 
rice, and olive oil, for example.

John

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