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		Grammar and Linguistics > How to read your height in American English...     
			
		 How to read your height in American English... 
		
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 Baadache
 
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							| How to read your height in American English... 
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							| Hi, 
 How to teach reading your height: eg, I am 1.70 tall. Is it:  1. I am one metre seventy tall 2. I am one point seven metres tall 3. I am a hundred and seventy centimetres tall. OR: 4. using the two words "feet" and "inches" ...eg: I am 5 feet ...    
 Thank you in advance. |  11 Sep 2011      
					
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 libertybelle
 
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							| In the US - I say: I �m 5 - 6  or 5 feet 6 - which everyone over there would understand.
 In Europe
 I say: I �m 170  which everyone would also probably understand.
 
 |  11 Sep 2011     
					
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 edrodmedina
 
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							| Very few Americans would use the metric system to tell you their height or weight. Most would say "I �m 5-6", well not most, but those who are 5 feet 6 inches tall I �m pretty sure most Americans aren � t 5 feet 6 inches tall (especially the Texans) and even they might fib and say "I �m 5-8". Then there are those who would say "I �m 5 foot 6." |  11 Sep 2011     
					
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 edrodmedina
 
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							| @Sainte-Marie...Not on those damn heels she �s not. LOL Ed |  11 Sep 2011     
					
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 Sainte-Marie
 
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							| Ed, the last time I remember her disquised as a man... |  11 Sep 2011     
					
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 almaz
 
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							| Feet, inches etc (imperial units) are still commonly used in the UK. 
 By the way, there is such an animal as plural  �foot�, especially when it�s used between a number and a noun: "I wouldn�t touch that with a twelve-foot bargepole" (you just wouldn�t say twelve-feet bargepole). |  11 Sep 2011     
					
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 douglas
 
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							| foot is used if you are using it as an adjective:   It �s a ten-foot pool.   The pole is ten feet long.   My key-phrase: "The five-foot man is five feet tall."   cheers, Douglas   EDIT: Oh yeah, I say I am "five- ten", five-foot ten", or "five feet, ten inches tall" |  12 Sep 2011     
					
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