Patrik, sir:

>In most engineering and scientific writing, there is no reason to spell out 
>the unit.
I have been observing various arguments that scholar present 'for or against' 
matric adoption in United States -especially the spellings & their usage. I 
think half the 'SI metric drive' is won if we join to adopt the SI Metric 
bible, as in Le Systeme Internationale d'Unites (SI in all languages). This is 
my view!

Regards,
Brij Bhushan Vij 
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Date: Wed, 13 May 2009 11:21:18 -0400
Subject: [USMA:45068] spelling vs symbols
From: [email protected]
To: [email protected]

The suggestion is sometimes advanced that, in written and printed discourse, 
the spelling-out of units can be dispensed with and symbols can be used 
exclusively. This idea is practical in genuine measurements, that is, when the 
symbol is preceded by Arabic numerals. Other cases call for the spelled form:


The spelled form is needed anywhere that a word is referred to as a word - for 
example, in a dictionary. 
A word can be used to discuss a concept - for example, in the history of 
measurement. 
A word is needed to explain its corresponding symbol. 
A major advantage in most languages is that a word can be inflected to make, 
for example, a possessive or plural form. 
In European alphabets, the spelling of a word provides a cue to pronunciation. 
The spelled-out version can be a pedantic redundancy to prevent mistakes - for 
example, mega versus milli in pharmacology. 
Indexes, including online search engines, include the spelled-out version. 
Interestingly, they treat symbols as alphabetical. 
A unit may need to be spelled out when it is introduced as a courtesy so that 
the reader doesn’t have to look it up. Some readers even in this newsgroup 
might need to look up “Bq,” for instance. 
Computer programs that convert text into voice need the spelled-out version, or 
milliampere becomes mother. 
There are other telling circumstances that I can’t think of right now.

In most engineering and scientific writing, there is no reason to spell out the 
unit.

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