enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Japanese units of measurement - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japanese_units_of_measurement

    The next year, a weights and measurements law codified the Japanese system, taking its fundamental units to be the shaku and kan and deriving the others from them. [4] The law codified the values of the traditional and metric units in terms of one another, [4] but retained the traditional units as the formal standard and metric values as ...

  3. Shaku (unit) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shaku_(unit)

    Shaku (Japanese: 尺) or Japanese foot [1] [2] is a Japanese unit of length derived (but varying) from the Chinese chi, originally based upon the distance measured by a human hand from the tip of the thumb to the tip of the forefinger [3] [a] (compare span). Traditionally, the length varied by location or use, but it is now standardized as 10/ ...

  4. Momme (unit) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Momme_(unit)

    Momme (匁, monme) is both a Japanese unit of mass and former unit of currency. As a measurement, Momme is part of a table of Japanese units where during the Edo period it was equal to 1 ⁄ 10 ryō (aka Tael). Since the Meiji era 1 momme has been reformed to equal exactly 3.75 grams in SI units. [2] The latter term for Momme refers to when it ...

  5. Koku - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Koku

    When the 1891 Japanese Weights and Measures Act was promulgated, it defined the shō unit as the capacity of the standard kyo-masu of 64827 cubic bu. [15] The same act also defined the shaku length as 10 ⁄ 33 metre. [15] The metric equivalent of the modern shō is 2401 ⁄ 1331 litres. [20] The modern koku is therefore 240,100 ⁄ 1331 litres ...

  6. List of obsolete units of measurement - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_obsolete_units_of...

    Toggle the table of contents. ... This is a list of obsolete units of measurement, organized by type. ... Japanese units of measurement;

  7. Ken (unit) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ken_(unit)

    The unit was born out of the necessity to measure land surface to calculate taxes. At the time of Toyotomi Hideyoshi (16th century), the ken was about 1.97 m (6.5 ft), but around 1650 the Tokugawa shogunate reduced it to 1.818 m (5.96 ft) specifically to increase taxes.

  8. Shao (unit) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shao_(unit)

    A shao (Chinese: 勺; pinyin: sháo) in China, shaku in Japan and jak in Korea, is a unit of volume measurement in East Asia. [1] One shao equals 1⁄100 sheng. It is 10 mL (millilitres) in China, [2] [3] 18.04 mL in Japan [4] and 18 mL in Korea. [5] Shao' is also a unit of area equal to 0.033 square meters (a hundredth of a tsubo) in Japan and ...

  9. Weights and Measures Act (Japan) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Weights_and_Measures_Act...

    The Weights and Measures Act (Japanese: 度量衡取締条例, Doryokori Shimarijorei) (Dajokan No. 135, August 5, 1875) were promulgated on August 5, 1875, and were the first weights and measures regulations in modern Japan. [1] A weights and measures certification office was established in Wakayama by 1889. [2]