The SI Brochure allows for certain variations and deprecates others.  Any 
national standard should fit within designating preferences where two or more 
ways are acceptable.  It would seem to me that people should follow the 
national standard for their country of citizenship, or, if different, their 
country of permanent residence.

For Americans, the power of setting the system of weights and measures is 
reserved to Congress (not that I agree they do it well).  In their wisdom, this 
is delegated to NIST through the Secretary of Commerce.  As far as I am 
concerned, NIST SP330 and SP811 are closer to the root of authority than ANSI 
SI10, and those guides are free.  I would follow those guides to American 
practice, and would consider the Webster, not Oxford, dictionary to be 
authoritative on American spelling (although both Webster and Oxford do a good 
job of covering the differences in American and British spelling).  Other 
guides can fill in helpful details as long as they do not conflict; certain 
industry-standard guides may need to be followed if one is in that industry 
(SAE TSB003 for me).


The US and UK have no mechanism for resolving the minor language differences; 
it is just not going to happen.  Americans should write like Americans, Brits 
like Brits, and both should be aware of and accepting of the differences, and 
avoid the few differences that actually result in confusion (we agree on table 
as a noun, but not on the verb, to table).  I do not agree with position that 
Americans should roll over and spell like Brits.  Nor do I agree that American 
spelling could be generally tolerated but not four little words (metre, litre, 
tonne, and deca-), at least, not unless the people proposing it can get NIST to 
accept the change.

We should not run around forcing metric orthodoxy on the man on the street, but 
educators and advocates of metrication need to be consistent, set and teach a 
good example for others.  If we do it wrong, where can anyone learn to do it 
right.



________________________________
 From: "mechtly, eugene a" <mech...@illinois.edu>
To: U.S. Metric Association <usma@colostate.edu> 
Sent: Monday, July 14, 2014 10:53 PM
Subject: [USMA:54150] Teaching Metric Units of Measurement
 

Although some readers in this forum are indifferent to standards for spelling 
and sounding the words associated with metric units of measurement, the persons 
who actually teach metric units in schools or in private settings, can not be 
ambivalent in their choices of how to write and speak metric words.

They would be perceived as silly if they alternated from one spelling to the 
other, and from one sounding to the other in trying to be impartial.

What standards, if any, should they follow?  Their own personal preferences, 
standards recommended in NIST documents, examples in the Oxford English 
Dictionary, practices exampled in the BIPM Brochure on SI, recommendations in 
the IEEE-ASTM SI 10, or what?

Whatever their choices, they impart their choices to their “students” by 
example, whether “good” or “bad” in our respective minds.

Eugene Mechtly 

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