Robert H. Bushnell. Those are very insightful points. Thanks for pointing
that out.

----- Message from "Robert H. Bushnell" <[email protected]> ---------
    Date: Mon, 23 Jun 2014 09:42:34 -0600
    From: "Robert H. Bushnell" <[email protected]>
Reply-To: [email protected]
Subject: [USMA:54021] Re: How meter is spelled in non-English languages
      To: "U.S. Metric Association" <[email protected]>
      Cc: "U.S. Metric Association" <[email protected]>

"metre and litre" have not been chosen for US english. 
  NIST has chosen meter and liter.  Also note that SI does not specify
spelling. 
  Robert H. Bushnell
   

       On Jun 22, 2014, at 7:52 PM, Harold_Potsdamer wrote:

Can you provide an examples or evidence where the metric units have
multiple spellings within the same language? 
         
        It is totally irrelevant how different languages spell the
metric units.  The fact is they spell it one way and only one way
within the same language.  The spelling metre and litre has been chosen
for English and that is what we need to stick to.  Otherwise it looks
like metric is a divided and inconsistent system.  The metric system is
unified and the spelling of the units within the same language must be
consistent. 
         
        English may have evolved two different spellings for many
words, but that does not apply to SI units.  In the same token that
British spellings are found in American usage when it is beneficial to
do so, standardised metric unit spellings need to be the exception.  
                            
                     FROM: [email protected]
           SENT: Sunday, 2014-06-22 19:02
           TO: U.S. Metric Association[1]
           SUBJECT: [USMA:54014] How meter is spelled in non-English
languages

          


         I did a little research on how meter is spelled in various
non-English languages. According to https://translate.google.com the
primary SI unit is spelled meter in thirteen non-English languages.
Those 13 languages are Afrikaans, Danish, Dutch, German, Hausa,
Islandic, Indonesian, Latin, Malay, Norwegian, Slovak, Slovenian and
Swedish. Hungarian has an accent mark in the first syllable méter
(which is pretty close to meter, so 14 if you count Hungarian). The
primary SI unit is spelled metre in only two non-English languages.
Those two languages are Catalan and Turkish. French has an accent mark
in the first syllable: mètre (which is pretty close to metre, so 3 if
you count French). Other languages have many different variations (for
example, metro in Spanish). Some languages use non-Latin-based scripts.
(English is written in a Latin-based script.) English, as we already
know, has evolved two different spellings for many words, not just for
the word meter / metre.

----- Message from Brian White <[email protected]> ---------
    Date: Sat, 21 Jun 2014 06:39:24 -0700
    From: Brian White <[email protected]>
Reply-To: [email protected]
Subject: [USMA:54013] Re: tries to pull a truck in heels - YouTube
      To: "U.S. Metric Association" <[email protected]>

Meter and metre are fine.  Both are better than feet or yards.


-------------------------
From: Harold_Potsdamer[2]
Sent: ‎6/‎21/‎2014 4:37
To: U.S. Metric Association[1]
Subject: [USMA:54012] Re: tries to pull a truck in heels - YouTube
 
                                 A lot of people make spelling errors,
it doesn’t mean it is right.
             
            Why didn’t they just use the symbol “m”?
             
             
                                        
                             FROM: [email protected]
               SENT: Friday, 2014-06-20 23:53
               TO: U.S. Metric Association[1]
               SUBJECT: [USMA:54010] Re: tries to pull a truck in
heels - YouTube

              


             Harold. Clearly, the signs say 1 METER - 2 METERS - 3
METERS et cetera, rendered with the American spelling, not the British
spelling.

----- Message from Harold_Potsdamer <[email protected]>
---------
    Date: Wed, 18 Jun 2014 20:44:48 -0400
    From: Harold_Potsdamer <[email protected]>
Reply-To: [email protected]
Subject: [USMA:53999] tries to pull a truck in heels - YouTube
      To: "U.S. Metric Association" <[email protected]>


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NMSStSeQyUI&feature=player_detailpage#t=50

                                  

                                 The distances are measured in metres.

----- End message from Harold_Potsdamer <[email protected]>
-----
 
             David Pearl www.MetricPioneer.com[3] 503-428-4917

----- End message from Brian White <[email protected]> -----
 
         David Pearl www.MetricPioneer.com[3] 503-428-4917

----- End message from "Robert H. Bushnell" <[email protected]> -----



Links:
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