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6 answers

Your Answer: NOT- Kelvin, Yard, cm.

ONLY the METER is............

Temperature is in C, not K..........

**** TLBS_ Unless you use 0.01 C for freezing. Physics and Engineering and all the real world uses C. 0.00 C is freezing. Check your books.......

PERIOD.

BASE UNIT - kelvin (K) and degree Celsius (°C) TEMPERATURE
The kelvin is defined as the fraction 1/273.16 of the thermodynamic temperature of the triple point of water; that is, the point at which water forms an interface of solid, liquid and vapor. This is defined as 0.01 °C on the Celsius scale and 32.02 °F on the Fahrenheit scale. The temperature zero K (kelvin) is called "absolute zero".

Yard is english.........

Centimeter has centi- in front, which means it is a form of the base unit (which of course is the meter)

**BassDude, It does'nt do to much to throw down that kind of source you listed, if you don't think about it.

..

2007-09-26 11:01:37 · answer #1 · answered by muddypuppyuk 5 · 1 1

Its backyard! although maximum SI based instruments comes from well-liked scientist or mathematicians,consisting of Newton, Kelvin, Pascal between others; meter and centimeters are secure in SI or gadget international. :) regards, Nyok, RME

2016-12-17 11:03:08 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Its yard!

Although most SI based units comes from famous scientist or mathematicians,such as Newton, Kelvin, Pascal among others; meter and centimeters are included in SI or system international. :)

regards,
Nyok, RME

2007-09-26 18:13:11 · answer #3 · answered by Niño C 1 · 0 1

Yard and centimetre.

SI base units

Name: Metre
Symbol: m
Quantity: Length

Name: Kelvin
Symbol: K
Quanitity: Thermodynamic temperature

For further information look at:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SI_base_unit
or,
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SI

2007-09-26 10:10:58 · answer #4 · answered by bassdude_46 2 · 0 1

Yard AND centimeter. Neither of them are SI base units.

But if you can only pick one, pick yard.

EDIT: the SI base unit of temperature *is* Kelvin
Here's your ultimate reference for that:
http://physics.nist.gov/cuu/Units/units.html
Straight from *the* source, NIST.

.

2007-09-26 10:47:53 · answer #5 · answered by tlbs101 7 · 0 1

yard

2007-09-26 10:10:45 · answer #6 · answered by James M 2 · 0 1

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