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SI - SI writing style |  | SI - SI writing style: Encyclopedia II - SI - SI writing style |  |
SI - Spelling variations.
Several nations, notably the United States, typically use the spellings 'meter' and 'liter' instead of 'metre' and 'litre' in keeping with standard American English spelling. In addition, the official US spelling for the SI prefix 'deca' is 'deka'.
The unit 'gram' is also sometimes spelled 'gramme' in English-speaking countries other than the United States, though that is an older spelling and its use is declining.
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See also:SI, SI - History, SI - Units, SI - SI writing style, SI - Spelling variations, SI - Cultural issues, SI - Trade |  | | SI, SI - Cultural issues, SI - History, SI - SI writing style, SI - Spelling variations, SI - Trade, SI - Units, Units of measurement, Weights and measures, Mesures usuelles, Metrified English unit, History of measurement, Imperial units, U.S. customary units, Metre-tonne-second system of units, Chinese system of units, Planck units, Atomic units, Geometrized units, CODATA, Metrication, Metric system in the United States, Metrology, Coordinated Universal Time (UTC), Binary prefixes - used to quantify large amounts of computer data, Orders of magnitude, ISO 31 |  | |
|  |  | SI: Encyclopedia II - SI - SI writing style
SI - SI writing style
- Symbols are written in lower case, except for symbols derived from the name of a person. For example, the unit of pressure is named after Blaise Pascal, so its symbol is written "Pa" whereas the unit itself is written "pascal". The one exception is the litre, whose original symbol "l" is dangerously similar to the numeral "1". The NIST recommends that "L" be used instead, a usage which is common in the U.S., Canada and Australia, and has been accepted as an alternative by the CGPM. The cursive "ℓ" is occasionally seen, especially in Japan, but this is not currently recommended by any standards body. For more information, see Litre.
- Symbols are written without grammatical markers when used with singular numerals: i.e. "25 kg", not "25 kgs". Pluralization would be language dependent; "s" plurals (as in French and English) are particularly undesirable since "s" is the symbol of the second. Other cases may be marked in a language-dependent manner, e.g. Finnish 25 kg:lla = 25 kilogrammalla "with 25 kg".
- Symbols do not have an appended period (.) unless at the end of a sentence.
- It is preferable to write symbols in upright Roman type (m for metres, L for litres), so as to differentiate from the italic type used for mathematical variables (m for mass, l for length).
- A space should separate the number and the symbol, e.g. "2.21 kg", "7.3×102 m2", "22 °C" [1]. Exceptions are the symbols for plane angular degrees, minutes and seconds (°, ′ and ″), which are placed immediately after the number with no intervening space.
- Spaces should be used to group decimal digits in threes, e.g. 1 000 000 or 342 142 (in contrast to the commas or dots used in other systems, e.g. 1,000,000 or 1.000.000).
- The 10th resolution of CGPM in 2003 declared that "the symbol for the decimal marker shall be either the point on the line or the comma on the line". In practice, the full stop is used in English, and the comma in most other European languages.
- Symbols for derived units formed from multiple units by multiplication are joined with a space or centre dot (·), e.g. N m or N·m.
- Symbols formed by division of two units are joined with a solidus (/), or given as a negative exponent. For example, the "metre per second" can be written "m/s", "m s-1", "m·s-1" or . A solidus should not be used if the result is ambiguous, i.e. "kg·m-1·s-2" is preferable to "kg/m/s2".
SI - Spelling variations
- Several nations, notably the United States, typically use the spellings 'meter' and 'liter' instead of 'metre' and 'litre' in keeping with standard American English spelling. In addition, the official US spelling for the SI prefix 'deca' is 'deka'.
- The unit 'gram' is also sometimes spelled 'gramme' in English-speaking countries other than the United States, though that is an older spelling and its use is declining.
Other related archives18 Brumaire, 2009, American, American English, Atomic units, Binary prefixes, Blaise Pascal, Bureau International des Poids et Mesures, CGPM, CODATA, Chinese system of units, Coordinated Universal Time (UTC), European Union, First Consul, France, French Revolution, French language, General Conference on Weights and Measures, Geometrized units, History of measurement, ISO 31, Imperial, Imperial units, In the United States, International Committee for Weights and Measures, Japan, Kelvin, Litre, Mesures usuelles, Metre-tonne-second system of units, Metric system in the United States, Metrication, Metrified English unit, Metrology, NIST, Napoleon I, Orders of magnitude, Planck units, SI base unit, SI derived unit, SI prefix, U.S. customary units, UK, US, USSR, United Kingdom, United States, Units of measurement, Weights and measures, World War II, ampere, amperes, base units, candela, centimetre-gram-second, comma, commerce, conversion to metric units, coulombs, data, decimal, engineers, exponent, farads, history of the metric system, in terms of SI units, italic type, kilogram, litre, lower case, measurement systems, metre, metric system, mole, non-SI units accepted for use with SI, numeral system, ohms, other units, pascal, physicists, point, prefix, prefixes, promote a worldwide measurement system, radio engineers, science, second, solidus, standards organisation, system of units, systems of measurement, unit, volts
 Adapted from the Wikipedia article "SI writing style", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki |
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