The Program is made available by Canadian Tire Corporation, Limited (referred to as Canadian Tire or we) on the following terms and conditions.Participating in the ProgramIn order to collect and redeem electronic Canadian Tire Money (eCTM®), you must become a member (a Member). In the UK, it is also a legal requirement that road signs indicating shorter distances are displayed in yards.ġ5 m = 15 × 1.0936132983 yd = 16.Triangle Rewards™ Program This page sets out important information about the Triangle Rewards program (the Program) – the program that rewards you with electronic Canadian Tire Money when you shop at participating Canadian Tire® stores, on-line at canadiantire.ca and at Canadian Tire gas bars. In the United Kingdom (UK) as well as the United States, the yard is frequently used when referring to distance. The yard is also used in cricket pitch dimensions, and sometimes in golf fairway measurements. Some suggest that the yard could have been derived based on the girth of a person's waist.Ĭurrent use: The yard is commonly used in field-length measurement for certain sports such as American and Canadian football, and association football (soccer). It is an English unit (predecessor of imperial units) and the term was derived from "gerd" in Old English, the earliest historical form of the English language. History/origin: The origin of the yard as a unit is unclear. It is also equal to 3 feet, or 36 inches. Since 1959, a yard has been defined as exactly 0.9144 meters. Yardĭefinition: A yard (symbol: yd) is a unit of length in both the imperial and US customary systems of measurement. The United States is one notable exception in that it largely uses US customary units such as yards, inches, feet, and miles instead of meters in everyday use. The current definition of the meter is effectively the same as the definition that was adopted in 1983, with slight modifications due to the change in definition of the second.Ĭurrent use: Being the SI unit of length, the meter is used worldwide in many applications such as measuring distance, height, length, width, etc. In 1960, the meter was again redefined, this time in terms of a certain number of wavelengths of a certain emission line of krypton-86. This changed in 1889, when the International prototype metre was established as the length of a prototype meter bar (made of an alloy of 90% platinum and 10% iridium) measured at the melting point of ice. History/origin: Originally, in 1793, the meter was defined as one ten-millionth of the distance from the equator to the North Pole. This definition was slightly modified in 2019 to reflect changes in the definition of the second. The meter is defined as the distance traveled by light in 1/299 792 458 of a second.
Definition: A meter, or metre (symbol: m), is the base unit of length and distance in the International System of Units (SI).