Listen, it’s very simple: In Britain we use the metric system, except for beer and milk, which come in pints. But not plant milk — that comes in litres.

Oh, and distances are in miles. But only if they’re too far to walk — if you can walk it it’s in metres. If you’re driving then your fuel efficiency is in miles-per-gallon, but petrol is sold in litres.

Oh, and your height is in feet and inches. If you don’t care much about your weight it’s in stone (but not pounds — no-one can remember how many pounds are in a stone and it’s hard to read the little tick marks on analogue scales). If you do care about your weight then your digital scales tell you it in kilograms.

Oh, and if there’s a heatwave then tabloids will forecast a “100°F scorcher”. But if it’s cold then it’s an “arctic blast” with “widespread temperatures below 0°C”.

I hope this clears things up.

@katemorley oh, if you explain it this way, it all amoes sense now :D but seriosly. I've always wondered what the heck is a stone.
Stone (unit) - Wikipedia

@csstrowbridge I don't know why the different stone weights were the weights they were, but I do know that livestock was measured in 14# stones, and that's presumably why live humans (and maybe recently dead ones, too) are measured by that particular stone, instead of a different one.