kenning
obsolete unit of dry measure in the imperial system equal to two pecks or half a bushel
Press Enter · cited answer in seconds
0 sources
kenning
Summary
kenning is an unit of volume[1]. kenning draws 2 Wikipedia views per month (unit_of_volume category, ranking #46 of 66).[2]
Key Facts
- kenning's instance of is recorded as unit of volume[3].
- kenning's instance of is recorded as dry measure[4].
- kenning's measured physical quantity is recorded as volume[5].
- kenning's part of is recorded as imperial system of units[6].
- kenning's different from is recorded as kenning[7].
- kenning's conversion to SI unit is recorded as {'unit': 'http://www.wikidata.org/entity/Q2332346', 'amount': '+18184.36'}[8].
- kenning's conversion to standard unit is recorded as {'unit': 'http://www.wikidata.org/entity/Q351646', 'amount': '+2'}[9].
- kenning's conversion to standard unit is recorded as {'unit': 'http://www.wikidata.org/entity/Q216658', 'amount': '+0.5'}[10].
- kenning's Google Knowledge Graph ID is recorded as /g/11bc5v06yh[11].
- kenning's Wikidata SPARQL query equivalent is recorded as wd:Q6390907 p:P2370/psn:P2370 [wikibase:quantityAmount ?source; wikibase:quantityUnit ?base]. ?item p:P2370/psn:P2370 [wikibase:quantityAmount ?target; wikibase:quantityUnit ?base]. BIND(?source / ?target as ?value)[12].
Why It Matters
kenning draws 2 Wikipedia views per month (unit_of_volume category, ranking #46 of 66).[2]