uncia
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uncia
Summary
uncia is an Ancient Roman unit of length[1]. uncia draws 38 Wikipedia views per month (ancient_roman_unit_of_length category, ranking #1 of 3).[2]
Key Facts
- uncia's instance of is recorded as Ancient Roman unit of length[3].
- uncia's instance of is recorded as unit of length[4].
- uncia's measured physical quantity is recorded as length[5].
- uncia's part of is recorded as Ancient Roman units of measurement[6].
- uncia's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/02qwrsz[7].
- uncia's described by source is recorded as Meyers Konversations-Lexikon, 4th edition (1885–1890)[8].
- uncia's Encyclopædia Britannica Online ID is recorded as topic/uncia-ancient-unit-of-length[9].
- uncia's different from is recorded as Roman uncia[10].
- uncia's conversion to SI unit is recorded as {'unit': 'Q11573', 'amount': '+0.0246'}[11].
- uncia's conversion to standard unit is recorded as {'unit': 'Q25907674', 'amount': '+1.33'}[12].
- uncia's MathWorld ID is recorded as Uncia[13].
- uncia's Wikidata SPARQL query equivalent is recorded as wd:Q1645564 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)[14].
- uncia's Great Norwegian Encyclopedia ID is recorded as uncia[15].
- uncia's maintained by WikiProject is recorded as WikiProject Mathematics[16].
- uncia's Wolfram Language unit code is recorded as "RomanCommonUnciae"[17].
- uncia's museum-digital tag ID is recorded as 34888[18].
Why It Matters
uncia draws 38 Wikipedia views per month (ancient_roman_unit_of_length category, ranking #1 of 3).[2] uncia has Wikipedia articles in 5 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[19] uncia is known by 7 alternative names across languages and contexts.[20]