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by benj111
2606 days ago
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In Europe theres regulations over labelling etc. In the UK if you buy a 'pint' of milk it will still be labelled 0.568 litres. Presumably there are some rules in the US also, or labels could just use some obscure measures that hide what a product contains. |
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Labeling definitely isn't always imperial in the US, and it isn't always metric in many European countries. Regulations tend to do a good job of avoiding units that are obscure in that they're rarely used for the specific purpose in question or would have clumsy numbers like the pint to liters conversion you noted.
e.g. A common PET bottle size in the US and elsewhere is 0.5L, which in the US is labeled as "0.5L"/"500mL" usually along with the, in my opinion, somewhat pointless "16.9 fl oz". Meanwhile, a 2L PET bottle is also common in the US and is labeled (and known by virtually everyone) as "2L".