Centimeter to Inch
cm
in
Conversion History
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Quick Reference Table (Centimeter to Inch)
| Centimeter (cm) | Inch (in) |
|---|---|
| 1 | 0.39370078740157480315 |
| 10 | 3.9370078740157480315 |
| 30 | 11.81102362204724409449 |
| 50 | 19.68503937007874015748 |
| 100 | 39.37007874015748031496 |
| 180 | 70.86614173228346456693 |
About Centimeter (cm)
A centimeter (cm) is one hundredth of a meter (10⁻² m) and the most familiar unit for body and clothing measurements in metric countries. Height, waist size, and shoe dimensions are commonly expressed in centimeters across Europe, Asia, and most of the world. It sits comfortably between the precision of the millimeter and the room-scale meter, making it ideal for human-scale objects. Standard paper sizes such as A4 (21 × 29.7 cm) are defined in centimeters.
An adult index finger is about 2 cm wide. A standard A4 sheet of paper is 21 cm × 29.7 cm. A typical paperback book spine is 1–3 cm thick.
Etymology: From Latin "centum" (hundred) + Greek "metron" (measure). The prefix centi- denotes 10⁻² in the SI system.
About Inch (in)
An inch (in) is a unit of length in the imperial and US customary systems, defined as exactly 25.4 millimeters. It is divided into 16 fractional parts for general use, or 1,000 thou (thousandths) in precision engineering. The inch dominates screen measurements (phones, monitors, TVs), pipe diameters, and construction dimensions in the United States. Despite metrication efforts, the inch remains deeply embedded in American consumer culture and manufacturing standards.
A US letter-size page is 8.5 × 11 inches. A 65-inch TV measures 65 inches diagonally. An adult thumb from tip to first knuckle is about 1 inch.
Etymology: From Latin "uncia" (one-twelfth), as the inch was originally one-twelfth of a Roman foot. The Old English "ynce" derives directly from this.
Centimeter – Frequently Asked Questions
What is a centimeter?
A centimeter (cm) is one hundredth of a meter (10⁻² m). It is the most familiar metric unit for body and clothing measurements — height, waist size, and shoe dimensions are typically expressed in centimeters in metric countries.
How many centimeters are in a foot?
One foot equals exactly 30.48 centimeters. Equivalently, 1 centimeter is approximately 0.3937 inches. Since many people know both their height in feet and in centimeters, this conversion is one of the most frequently searched.
How many centimeters are in a meter?
Exactly 100 centimeters equal one meter. The prefix centi- means one hundredth in the SI system, so this relationship is definitional rather than a conversion to memorize.
Why do metric countries use centimeters for body measurements but millimeters for engineering?
Centimeters are used for body measurements because human-scale dimensions work naturally as whole or simple decimal numbers — "175 cm" is easier to say than "1750 mm". Engineering switches to millimeters because precision matters more than readability: a 10.5 mm bolt is clearer than a 1.05 cm bolt when tenths of a millimeter are significant. The choice reflects the granularity needed in each context.
Why does clothing use different size systems in the US vs Europe?
European clothing sizes are loosely based on body measurements in centimeters — a size 40 shirt often corresponds to a 40 cm collar, and dress sizes track waist measurements. US sizes use an arbitrary numbering system rooted in 19th-century convention, not direct metric measurements. This divergence was never internationally standardized, which is why a US size 8 dress does not directly correspond to a European 38, even though both systems derive loosely from body dimensions.
Inch – Frequently Asked Questions
How long is an inch?
An inch is defined as exactly 25.4 millimeters. It is approximately the width of an adult thumb at the first knuckle, or slightly shorter than a standard paperclip (which is about 1.1 inches).
How many inches are in a foot?
Exactly 12 inches equal one foot. There are 36 inches in a yard and 63,360 inches in a mile. The 12-inch foot has its origin in the Roman duodecimal system, which divided many measurements into twelfths.
Why are US pipe and bolt sizes based on fractions of an inch rather than millimeters?
American plumbing and fastener standards were set in the 19th century when imperial was the only system in use. A "½-inch pipe" actually has a bore close to 0.622 inches — the name refers to its approximate inner diameter, not an exact measurement. Bolt sizes like ⅜-16 UNC mean ⅜-inch diameter with 16 threads per inch. Switching to metric would require replacing every fitting, die, and tap in the country plus retraining an entire trade workforce, so the fractional-inch system persists despite metric being more logical.
Why are TV and screen sizes measured in inches globally, even in metric countries?
The consumer electronics industry was dominated by American companies — RCA, Motorola, and later IBM and Apple — when screens became mass-market in the 1950s–70s. These companies sized and marketed their products in inches, and the convention spread globally. Today, even in fully metric countries, a TV is still a "65-inch" screen. No country labels screens in centimeters, and manufacturers use inches universally.
How do fractional inches work — what does 3/8" mean?
Imperial fractions divide an inch into powers of 2: halves (1/2"), quarters (1/4"), eighths (1/8"), sixteenths (1/16"). To convert: 3/8" = 3 ÷ 8 = 0.375 inches = 9.525 mm. On a ruler, the longer tick marks are halves and quarters; shorter marks are eighths and sixteenths. Engineering drawings often use decimal inches (0.375") rather than fractions to avoid ambiguity.