Paul, Bill sirs:

>It would give the impression that it is considered necessary to know all the 
>prefixes in order to "GO METRIC", which is not true.

>It has always been (and should be) the practice that one does not learn 
>everything about SI but only what one only needs.
Isn't *everything and 'to know all'* misleading the public; who are SIncerly 
desirous to learn and practise Metric Norms in their day-to-day life.
Going Metric make NO CLAIMS that one got to know every thing about SI or the 
Metric system! It shall suffice if there is an awakening that 'learning the 
Metric System' is oriented to establish its link with the Length Measure, METRE 
and *not* merely linked to decimal multiples & sub-multiples - a common drag in 
GO METRIC plan that Le Systeme Internationale d'Unites, is all about. Take a 
sample of any 10 post graduate 'individuals' and ask them: How often they 
need/use the knowledge of ALL prefixes and/or suffixes from SI guides. Portals 
of education can start with mere basics and make student grow as his/her area 
of need grows, as they go higher in study courses. 
Be Broad, Be Metric!
Brij Bhushan Vij 

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From: [email protected]
Subject: [USMA:46180] Re: Monday Puzzle: Conversion Factors - TierneyLab Blog - 
NYTimes.com
Date: Wed, 18 Nov 2009 10:07:08 -0600
CC: [email protected]
To: [email protected]



I second Bill's motion. We are unlikely to convince the U.S. public that metric 
is simple if we throw all the prefixes at them.  They don't need all of SI any 
more than they currently need all the minutiae of YOE.


During the 1970s, NBS ( now NIST) prepared a chart entitled "All you will 
really need to know about metric (in your everyday life)." (see separate post). 
The graphics and some of the content might need upgrading, but the simplicity 
of metric is well illustrated.


Paul Trusten

On Nov 18, 2009, at 9:14, Bill Hooper <[email protected]> wrote:




I'm not sure I like the idea of publicizing widely a long mnemonic to learn ALL 
the SI prefixes.


Few people will ever need to use the very large or very small prefixes and 
trying to learn ALL of them would be seen as a useless exercise in futility. 
It would give the impression that it is considered necessary to know all the 
prefixes in order to "GO METRIC", which is not true.


It has always been (and should be) the practice that one does not learn 
everything about SI but only what one only needs.
Yes, it is useful to know that the other parts (prefixes, units, etc.) are 
available so if one develops a need for some SI unit or prefix that had not 
been previously needed, one can look up whatever new is needed. Beyond that, it 
is not helpful to learn more. Few people will ever encounter yoctoteslas (yT) 
or zetabequerels (ZBq) and the like.


If anything, suggesting that it is useful to memorize all the prefixes would 
only hurt efforts to get people to accept SI.


Pat's Naughtin's mnemonics (copy below) are clever and may be helpful for the 
few of us who might find it helpful know all the prefixes by memory, but they 
are not useful for everyone.



Even pat's mnemonics do not help me keep straight the difference between yocto 
and yotta, and between zetta and zepto. It helps to note that almost all the 
smaller-than-1 prefixes end in "o" while almost all the bigger-than-1 prefixes 
end in "a". The only exceptions are "kilo" and "milli" (and the lesser used 
"centi", "deci", "hecto"). 


I note that Pat's list shows "pica" for one of the submultiples (10^12); it 
should be "pico", in agreement with the pattern noted above. 




Regards,
Bill Hooper





On  Nov 17 , at 7:07 PM, Pat Naughtin wrote:
SI prefix mnemonics I have not found mnemonics to help young people learn SI 
basics, such as the names of the prefixes so I devised two mnemonics to help 
people learn SI prefixes that are multiples of 1000 easily. These were prepared 
for trade training in Australia where the prefixes, deci, centi, deca, and 
hecto are rarely used. Prefixes less than 1 (sub-multiples) millie, mike's 
nana, pickled fish at zepto's yacht(o) milli micro nano pica femto atto zepto 
yocto m ยต n p f a z y Prefixes more than 1 (multiples) killer Meg, Giggling, 
Terrified Peter's Extra Zits. Yuk! kilo mega giga tera peta exa zetta yotta k M 
G T P E Z Y

                                          
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