Whats up with the British?

adventuregirl

New member
I am not Brit bashing, I really love England. I just wanna know why they use the term stone to weigh themselves. I know 1st = 14lbs, but it just doesnt make any sense to me. Where did that reasoning even come from? Anyone know? Although it is a little odd, it isnt such a bad idea, i mean hey, weighing in the double digits always sounds good!!!
 
Stone (weight - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia)

The stone is a unit of weight and mass. It is part of the Imperial system of weights and measures used in the British Isles, and formerly used in most Commonwealth countries. It is equal to 14 pounds avoirdupois, and to 6.35029318 kg.

Eight stone make a hundredweight in the Imperial system.

The plural form of stone is correctly stone, though stones is sometimes used, not usually by natives of the British Isles. The abbreviation is st.


The stone was historically used for weighing agricultural commodities. Potatoes, for example, were traditionally sold in stone and half-stone (14-pound and 7-pound) quantities.

A stone as a unit of 14 pounds avoirdupois originates with the definition in 1340 in England of the (now obsolete) sack defined as comprising 26 stone each of 14 pounds (ie 364 pounds)[1]. This supplanted earlier definitions of both sack and stone as units of measure, and set a standard for each.

Historically the number of pounds in a stone varied by commodity, and was not the same in all times and places even for one commodity. The OED contains examples[2] including

Current use
Although no longer an official unit of measure, the stone remains widely used within the British Isles as a means of expressing human body weight. People in these countries normally describe themselves as weighing, for example, "11 stone 4" (11 stone and 4 pounds), rather than "72 kilogrammes" in most other countries, or "158 pounds" (the conventional way of expressing the same weight in the United States and Canada). Its widespread colloquial use may be compared to the persistence in the British Isles of other Imperial units like the foot, the inch, and the mile, despite these having been entirely or partly supplanted by metric measurements in official use (a similar usage persists in Canada, despite that country, unlike the USA, having converted to the metric system in the 1970s).

The official unit of body weight in medical and other contexts is the kilogramme. In official use, provision is usually made for the public to express body weight in either stone or kilogrammes. For example, on at least one National Health Service website both Imperial and metric units are used [3].

Outside the British Isles, stone may also be used to express body weight in casual contexts in other Commonwealth countries, particularly Australia and New Zealand.

Though not predominantly used in media, the Ultimate Fighting Championship weigh-ins on European based pay-per-view channels use this measurement to show the fighter's pre-fight weight.

A stone is also a measurement of weight in the game Ultima Online.
 
I am not Brit bashing, I really love England. I just wanna know why they use the term stone to weigh themselves. I know 1st = 14lbs, but it just doesnt make any sense to me. Where did that reasoning even come from? Anyone know? Although it is a little odd, it isnt such a bad idea, i mean hey, weighing in the double digits always sounds good!!!

Old familiar habits die hard, I guess. Just as we Americans refuse to fully take on the metric system. It's not just the Brits. My Australian mother-in-law always refers to her weight in stone as well.
 
I am not Brit bashing, I really love England. I just wanna know why they use the term stone to weigh themselves. I know 1st = 14lbs, but it just doesnt make any sense to me. Where did that reasoning even come from? Anyone know? Although it is a little odd, it isnt such a bad idea, i mean hey, weighing in the double digits always sounds good!!!

I think 16 oz = 1 lb doesn't make much sense either! Imperial measurements are rather confusing, I mean I once had instructions that listed a thickness as 64/128"
I know that's half an inch, but why not just say it? Argh :)

Funnily enough though, I think of all measurements in metric except for altitude.
 
The metric system is SOOOOOOOO much easier.

1kilogram = 1000grams
1metre = 1000centimetres
1kilometre = 1000metres

All nice rounded numbers :)
 
I agree that the metric system is soooo much better as well. Not just because I have been using it for all my life. However when it comes to losing weight lbs are better that kgs. Because there are even more precise and it motivates you when you know you have lost a pound, because it takes less time. Would you agree with me?
 
i have to admit i prefer and always think in imperial especially where weights are concerned, even though i was only about 7 when it came in. it seems like you are losing more when you measure in pounds as well. it seems more to lose a lb than 0.4 of a kilo, even though i know it isnt. slim
 
i have to admit i prefer and always think in imperial especially where weights are concerned, even though i was only about 7 when it came in. it seems like you are losing more when you measure in pounds as well. it seems more to lose a lb than 0.4 of a kilo, even though i know it isnt. slim

I agree! Of course, I'm a Yank..lol. But I've lived overseas enough to be pretty familiar with metric--and I still prefer imperial in nearly every measurement. :)
 
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