Anglish Twelvish Metings

This is a of  grounded upon English  as well as Twelvish. These metings are often already grounded upon groupings of twelve, which is why we chose to do this. Hopefully this can be a good to the overly French Metric stellel. Great thanks to Wordwork for his work on Twelvish, as well as Wulfrun for starting this undertaking and doing most of the.

Dry
STILL BEING WORKED ON.

Wet
STILL BEING WORKED ON.

STILL BEING WORKED ON.

Footmarks
1. Thumb is a sidekirry name for inch, which is an early Latin loan. Feet and thumbs are so often brooked, that we reckoned it would be worth to keep them in the stellel.

2. Wulfrun grounded the length upon the palm, as that would lead to less in the lengths of things than working with feet. The palm was to hand (another little-known mete only a little bit longer) so that its name is Anglish.

3. Mile is another early Latin loan. There is, however, no better name for something about that length.

4. I went with calling "square" metes "flat".

5. The acre, which is a, is made to be a  here

6. In the US Public Land Survey System (PLSS), a "Township" is made up of 36 mile^2 "sections" or "lots".

7. The pound was wended to match lb=pt*g.

8. A penny should weigh a pennyweight. Hence, 100 pence is a pound.

9. "Ounce" means "twelfth".

A. Grounded upon the wonly "hundredweight", which was "a hundred" pounds. (The meaning of "hundred" wasn't so sheer back in the day. Sometimes it meant 120 in tennish. Likewise, sometimes a hundredweight meant d112 pounds, whereas other times it meant d100 pounds.)