Type a search term to find related articles by LIMS subject matter experts gathered from the most trusted and dynamic collaboration tools in the laboratory informatics industry.
The traditional Burmese units of measurement were a system of measurement used in Myanmar.[citation needed]
Myanmar was one of three countries that had not adopted the International System of Units (SI) metric system as their official system of weights and measures according to the 2010 CIA Factbook.[1] However, in June 2011, U Kyaw Htoo from the Myanmar government's Ministry of Commerce began discussing proposals to reform the measurement system in Burma and adopt the kilogram for domestic trade, reasoning that this would simplify foreign trade which it conducts exclusively in metric;[2] and in October 2013, Pwint San, Deputy Minister for Commerce, announced that the country was preparing to adopt the metric system.[3]
As of 2006, Myanmar government web pages in English used imperial and metric units inconsistently. For instance, the Ministry of Construction used miles to describe the length of roads[4] and square feet for the size of houses,[5] but square kilometres for the total land area of new town developments in Yangon City.[5] As of 2010 the Ministry of Agriculture used acres for land areas.[6] As of 2009 the Ministry of Foreign Affairs used kilometres (with mile equivalents in parentheses) to describe the dimensions of the country.[7]
Unit | Metric | Imperial/US | Ratio to previous | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Burmese | Romanized | |||
ဆံချည် | sanchi | 79.375 μm | 3+1⁄8 thou/mil | |
နှမ်း | hnan | 793.75 μm | 31+1⁄4 thou/mil | 10 |
မုယော | muyaw | 4.7625 mm | 3⁄16 in | 6 |
လက်သစ် | let thit | 19.05 mm | 3⁄4 in; one digit | 4 |
မိုက် | maik | 152.4 mm | 6 in; one shaftment | 8 |
ထွာ | htwa | 228.6 mm | 9 in; one span | 1.5 |
တောင် | taung | 457.2 mm | 1+1⁄2 ft; one cubit | 2 |
လံ | lan | 1.8288 m | 6 ft; one fathom | 4 |
တာ | ta | 3.2004 m | 10+1⁄2 ft | 1.75 |
ဥသဘ | out-thaba (from Pali usabha) |
64.008 m | 70 yd | 20 |
ကောသ | kawtha (from Pali kosa) |
1.28016 km | 0.795455 mi | 20 |
ဂါ၀ုတ် | ga-wout (from Pali gāvuta) |
5.12064 km | 3.18182 mi; about one league |
4 |
ယူဇနာ | yuzana (from Pali yūjanā) |
20.48256 km | 12.7273 mi | 4 |
Unit | Metric | Imperial/US | Ratio to previous | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Burmese | Romanized | |||
ရွေးလေး | yway lay | 136.078 mg | 2.1 grain | |
ရွေးကြီး | yway gyi | 272.155 mg | 4.2 grain | 2 |
ပဲသား | petha | 1.02058 g | 15.75 grain | 3.75 |
မူးသား | mutha | 2.04117 g | 31.5 grain | 2 |
မတ်သား | mattha | 4.08233 g | 63 grain | 2 |
ငါးမူးသား | nga mutha[N 1] | 8.16466 g | 0.288 oz | 2 |
ကျပ်သား | kyattha[N 2] | 16.3293 g | 0.576 oz | 2 |
အဝက်သား | awettha | 204.117 g | 7.2 oz | 12.5 |
အစိတ်သား | aseittha | 408.233 g | 14.4 oz | 2 |
ငါးဆယ်သား | ngase tha | 816.466 g | 1.8 lb | 2 |
ပိဿာ | peittha[N 3] | 1.63293 kg | 3.6 lb | 2 |
အချိန်တစ်ရာ | achein taya | 163.293 kg | 360 lb | 100 |
Unit | Metric | Imperial | US | Ratio to previous | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Burmese | Romanized | ||||
လမြူ | la myu | 79.9118 mL | 2+13⁄16 fl oz | 2.70214 fl oz | |
လမျက် | la myet | 159.824 mL | 5+5⁄8 fl oz | 5.40428 fl oz | 2 |
လမယ် | la me | 319.647 mL | 11+1⁄4 fl oz | 10.8086 fl oz | 2 |
စလယ် | sa le | 639.294 mL | 1+1⁄8 pints | 1.35107 pints | 2 |
ခွက် | hkwet | 1.27859 L | 1+1⁄8 qt | 1.35107 qt | 2 |
ပြည် | pyi | 2.55718 L | 2+1⁄4 qt | 2.70214 qt | 2 |
စိတ် | seit | 10.2287 L | 2+1⁄4 gallons 1+1⁄8 pecks |
2.70214 gallons 1.16106 pecks |
4 |
ခွဲ | hkwe | 20.4574 L | 4+1⁄2 gallons 2+1⁄4 pecks |
5.40428 gallons 2.32213 pecks |
2 |
တင်း | tin | 40.9148 L | 9 gallons 1+1⁄8 bushels |
10.8086 gallons 1.16107 bushels |
2 |
Unit | Equivalent to | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Burmese | Romanized | pya | mu | mat | nga mu | kyat |
ပြား | 1 pya | 1 | 1⁄10 | 1⁄25 | 1⁄50 | 1⁄100 |
မူး | 1 mu | 10 | 1 | 2⁄5 | 1⁄5 | 1⁄10 |
မတ် | 1 mat | 25 | 2+1⁄2 | 1 | 1⁄2 | 1⁄4 |
ငါးမူး | 5 mu (nga mu) | 50 | 5 | 2 | 1 | 1⁄2 |
ကျပ် | 1 kyat | 100 | 10 | 4 | 2 | 1 |
In October 2013, the Ministry of Commerce announced that Myanmar was preparing to adopt the International System of Units (SI) as the country's official system of measurement.[3]
Examples of metrication in Myanmar include weather forecasts by the Department of Meteorology and Hydrology being given with temperatures in Celsius.[8] Petrol in Myanmar is sold with prices in Burmese kyat per litre (K/L).[9][10] Speed limits in Myanmar are given by law in kilometres per hour (km/h).[11][12]