What is metre?

The metre is the SI base unit of length. It is used globally in science, engineering, geography, and everyday measurement as the standard reference for distance.

Real-world uses

The metre is the standard unit for everyday measurements worldwide, from room dimensions and furniture sizes to athletic track events like the 100 m sprint. Engineers, architects, and scientists use it as the fundamental length reference in the SI system.

History

Originally defined in 1793 during the French Revolution as one ten-millionth of the distance from the North Pole to the equator along a meridian through Paris. Since 1983, it is defined by the speed of light in vacuum.

Common mistakes

Confusing "meter" (the measuring device) with "metre" (the unit of length) in British English. Also, people sometimes incorrectly assume 1 metre equals exactly 3 feet; it is actually about 3.281 feet.

What is centimetre?

A centimetre is a metric unit of length equal to one hundredth of a metre. It is commonly used for everyday measurements such as clothing sizes, body height, and small object dimensions.

Real-world uses

Centimetres are widely used in clothing measurements, body height in medical records (outside the US), screen sizes in some markets, and school rulers. Tailors and dressmakers rely on centimetre tape measures for precise garment fitting.

History

The centimetre was established as part of the original metric system in the 1790s. It served as the base length unit in the now-superseded CGS (centimetre-gram-second) system used extensively in physics until the mid-20th century.

Common mistakes

Forgetting that there are 2.54 cm in one inch, not 2.5. Also, confusing cm² (area) with cm (length) when specifying material dimensions.

When is this conversion used?

This conversion is frequently needed in construction, architecture, and real estate where building codes may specify dimensions in one system while materials are sold in another. Screen sizes, paper dimensions, and clothing measurements often require converting between centimetres and inches, especially when shopping internationally.

Worked examples

1 metre = 100 centimetre

1 centimetre = 0.01 metre

How to convert metre to centimetre

To convert metre to centimetre, multiply the value by 100.

To convert centimetre back to metre, multiply by 0.01.

Measurement standards

The metre is one of seven SI base units, maintained by the International Bureau of Weights and Measures (BIPM). Since 2019, it is defined by fixing the numerical value of the speed of light in vacuum to exactly 299,792,458 metres per second.

Did you know?

A human hair is roughly 70 micrometres wide, while a single gold atom measures about 0.144 nanometres in diameter — meaning you could line up nearly half a million atoms across the width of one hair.

Quick reference: metre to centimetre

metrecentimetre
0.110
0.550
1100
2200
5500
101,000
252,500
505,000
10010,000
25025,000
50050,000
1,000100,000

Common values

metrecentimetre
Height of a door2.1 metre210 centimetre
Basketball court length28 metre2,800 centimetre
Football field (soccer)105 metre10,500 centimetre
Marathon distance42,195 metre4,219,500 centimetre
Altitude of a cruising airplane10,668 metre1,066,800 centimetre