It's miles and yards, not miles and feet.
(apart from - as you said - feet for width and height).
I've yet to see my first sighting of a 'km' sign in my travels up and down the 
UK (and we've travelled extensively).  Apart from anything UK cars use what's 
called a 'milometer' - a British morphing of the term odometer and miles.  I 
don't see how UK cars could make use of distances in a system drivers cannot 
use on their instrumentation (unless they import a car from abroad - 'grey 
imports' - although I have seen many subarus bought this way which have had 
their instruments changed to 'mph only' presumably for the more stricter MoT 
stations).  I've also not seen the use of km in newspapers - except for one 
paper called 'Metro' which actually has a policy of using metric(!) but even 
with that they'll bracket imperial (apart from, bizarrely, snow depth which 
they quote in inches but then bracket 'cm' - maybe they think inches are 
metric!).  In practice the normal daily's will even 'translate' a distance 
which would ordinarily definitely be in km to miles (eg a report from France). 
Like domestic BBC new items.

From: [email protected]
To: [email protected]
Subject: [USMA:46644] And, by the way......
Date: Sun, 14 Feb 2010 20:42:06 +0000










.....although, again, admittedly rare, newspapers and 
books in the UK have been known to use kilometres as well as miles.
 
Yes, all signposts on UK public roads are legally required 
to read in miles and feet (although this is not always the case) but some 
publcations, particularly newspapers, will happily mix kilometres with 
miles

  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: 
  Stephen Davis 
  To: U.S. Metric Association 
  Sent: Sunday, February 14, 2010 8:32 
  PM
  Subject: [USMA:46643] Re: Burma
  

  "I can assure you that almost all publications, and 
  other media outlets, would use miles over here.  Based on the 
  non-metrication of our roads I'd guess."
   
  Except for private roads of course, which can use metric 
  signs if they wish.  And though it is admittedly pretty rare, you can 
  find mixtures of metric and imperial on British road signs....bridge heights, 
  for example, can often be in metres other than, or as well as, 
  feet.
   
  A statement on the sorry mess that measurement 
  is in this country, unfortunately.
  


  
    ----- Original Message ----- 
    From: 
    Stephen 
    Humphreys 
    To: U.S. Metric Association 
    Sent: Saturday, February 13, 2010 7:10 
    PM
    Subject: [USMA:46629] Re: Burma
    
Not sure.  Some publishers use kiolmetres for 
    international books.  Perhaps it's something like that.  Like the 
    way 'BBC World' would say 'The accident happened 3 kilometres from the 
    junction' with the exact same feature being broadcast as 'The accident 
    happened 2 miles from the junction' in domestic BBC stations.  You 
    mention it as a excerpt - was the spelling 'metER' as you mention or 
    'metRE'? 
    

    I can assure you that almost all publications, and other media outlets, 
    would use miles over here.  Based on the non-metrication of our roads 
    I'd guess.


    
    Date: Sat, 13 Feb 2010 18:34:26 +0000
From: 
    [email protected]
To: [email protected]
Subject: 
    [USMA:46627] Re: Burma


    

    But then 
    how does that explain why they gave the distance only in kilometers and not 
    both kilometers and miles?

-- Ezra

----- Original Message 
    -----
From: "Stephen Humphreys" <[email protected]>
To: 
    "U.S. Metric Association" <[email protected]>
Sent: Saturday, 
    February 13, 2010 5:40:34 AM GMT -08:00 US/Canada Pacific
Subject: 
    [USMA:46622] Re: Burma


    
    


    
Ezra:"I 
    noted in one of their (free) excerpts from another part of the book that 
    they referred to the length of a particular railway journey in kilometres, 
    which I presume was done for the benefit of their (UK) readers."
    
    
      

      

      Surely you mean 'miles' (UK tracks being in miles and UK citizens 
      usage).  km would be there for Australia for 
    example.

    
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