2. To mark off or apportion, usually with reference to a given unit of measurement: Each year Tommy's mother measured his height to see how much he grew during the past 12 months.
A measure us a dimension, quantity, or a capacity as determined by comparisons with certain standards.
2. A unit specified by a scale; such as, a degree, or by variable conditions: The thermometer that Jane had outside on her balcony was a measure she used for determining how cold or how warm it was to be that day.
The science of measurement standards and methods is known as metrology.
Today the chief systems are the English units of measurement and the metric system
The United States is one of the few countries still using the English system; all other major nations have either converted to the metric system or committed themselves to conversion.
The English system is much older and is said to be less practical than the metric system, and in the United States there has been considerable discussion in favor of adopting the metric system as the principal system; however, attempts to legislate such a change in the U.S. Congress have failed.
The basic units of the English system, the yard of length and the pound of mass, are now defined in terms of the metric standards, the meter of length and the kilogram of mass.