<p>Just a quick question for anyone who knows.</p>
<p>Do the math's section use imperial units? E.g. Inches</p>
<p>If so, does this apply to overseas ( Non US ) SAT tests.</p>
<p>Why i ask this is because the US is the only developed country that still uses the imperial system, a highly inefficient one comparative to the metric system.</p>
<p>If they do use the imperial system, it won't make much of a difference, the only thing is that it may take some thinking during the exam.</p>
<p>since the college board typically has a northeast, united states elitist slant, i'm thinking that it'll all be inches even if it is overseas</p>
<p>Don't worry about it...all conversion factors and such are given.</p>
<p>And they would probobly only have a few questions with conversions (or none at all). Also, why does everyone say sat mathS. Its MATH not MATHS! It drives me crazy...</p>
<p>It's probably because 'math' is short for mathematics. I guess saying maths makes sense....just not to people in the US.</p>
<p>Yes, Americans are not to smart (I am one btw) with their units, and weird words for things that don't make sense. </p>
<p>There are never any questions that require you to actually know units of measurement. At least, I haven't seen it.</p>
<p>"Yes, Americans are not to smart (I am one btw) with their units"</p>
<p>kind of ironic, but you're missing an extra 'o' in 'too'</p>
<p>no he/she meant that he/she is ONE (as in IS an American)</p>
<p>that person meant that he is an american BTW...not that he is smart btw (though he may be idk)</p>
<p>rolls eyes. I wasn't even talking about that.</p>
<p>why is this such a big deal laserprecision? no one likes a smartass.</p>