Line (unit)
The line (abbreviated L or l or ‴ or lin.) was a small English unit of length, variously reckoned as 1⁄10, 1⁄12, 1⁄16, or 1⁄40 of an inch.[a] It was not included among the units defined in the Weights and Measures Act 1824, which established the British Imperial units of measurement system.
Size
[edit | edit source]The line was not recognized by any statute of the English Parliament but was usually understood as 1⁄4 of a barleycorn,[1] (which itself was recognized by statute as 1⁄3 of an inch[2]) making it 1⁄12 of an inch, and 1⁄144 of a foot. The line was eventually decimalized as 1⁄10 of an inch, without recourse to barleycorns.[5]
The US button trade uses the same or a similar term but defined as one-fortieth of the US-customary inch (making a button-maker's line equal to 0.635 mm (0.0250 in)).[6][7]
In use
[edit | edit source]Botanists formerly used the unit (usually as 1⁄12 inch) to measure the size of plant parts. Linnaeus's Philosophia botanica (1751) includes the Linea in its summary of units of measurements, defining it as Linea una Mensurae parisinae [lit. 'One line of the Parisian measure']; Stearns gives its length as 2.25 mm (0.089 in). Even after metrication, British botanists continued to employ tools with gradations marked as linea (lines); the British line is approximately 2.1 mm (0.083 in) and the Paris line approximately 2.3 mm (0.091 in).[8]
Entomologists in the UK and other European countries in the 1800s used lines as a unit of measurement for insects, at least for the relatively large mantids and phasmids. Examples include Westwood,[9][10] in the UK, and de Haan[11] in the Netherlands.
Gunsmiths and armament companies also employed the 1⁄10-inch line (the "decimal line"), in part owing to the importance of the German and Russian arms industries.[12] These are now given in terms of millimeters, but the seemingly arbitrary 7.62 mm (0.30 in) caliber was originally understood as a 3-line caliber (as with the 1891 Mosin–Nagant rifle). The 12.7 mm (0.50 in) caliber used by the M2 Browning machine gun was similarly a 5-line caliber.[12]
Other 'line' units
[edit | edit source]Other similar small units called lines include:
- The Russian liniya (ли́ния), 1⁄10 of the diuym, which had been set precisely equal to an English inch by Peter the Great[13]
- The French ligne or "Paris line", 1⁄12 of the French inch (French: pouce), 2.256 mm and about 1.06 L.
- The Portuguese linha, 1⁄12 of the Portuguese inch or 12 "points" (pontos) or 2.29 mm
- The German linie was usually 1⁄12 of the German inch but sometimes also 1⁄10 German inch
- The Vienna line, 1⁄12 of a Vienna inch.[14][15]
See also
[edit | edit source]Notes
[edit | edit source]References
[edit | edit source]Citations
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- ^ Jefferson (1790).
- ^ Niles (1814), p. 22.
- ^ Jefferson,[3] republished by Niles.[4]
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- ^ a b Hogg (1991).
- ^ Cardarelli (2004), pp. 121–124.
- ^ Albert Johannsen. "Manual of petrographic methods". p. 623.
- ^ Karl Wilhelm Naegeli; Simon Schwendener. "The Microscope in Theory and Practice". p. 294.
Bibliography
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