The Hao (Chinese: 毫; pinyin: háo) in Mandarin, or hou in Cantonese, is a traditional Chinese unit of length. One hao equals 1/10 of a li, 1/10000 of a chi, or 33+1⁄3 μm.
[1][2]
Chinese length units promulgated in 1915
Table of Chinese length units promulgated in 1915[3]
Chinese mile, this li is not the small li above, which has a different character and tone
Present law on Chinese length units
This law of length measurement was issued by the Chinese government in 1929, and has been effective since 1 January, 1930. The base unit chi is defined to be 1/3 meter.
[4][5][6]
Table of Chinese length units effective since 1930[4]
Chinese mile, this li is not the small li above, which has a different character and tone
Chinese length units in engineering
These units are based on the metric system. The Chinese word for metre is 米mǐ, which can take the Chinese standard SI prefixes (for "kilo-", "centi-", etc.).
In the engineering field, traditional units are rounded up to metric units. [7][8]
^"權度法 [Quándù Fǎ]", 政府公報 [Zhèngfǔ Gōngbào, Government Gazette], vol. 957, Beijing: Office of the President, 7 January 1915, pp. 85–94[permanent dead link]. (in Chinese)
^《中华人民共和国国务院公报》1959年第16号(总号:180)第316页《統一公制計量單位中文名称方案》("Gazette of the State Council of the People's Republic of China" No. 16, 1959 (Total No.: 180) p. 316 "Proposal for Unifying the Chinese Names of Metric Measurement Units" )