Everyday Reference Tables
Quick-look conversions and reference data for daily life.
Time Zones: 24 Major Cities
All offsets shown as UTC+/â. Times shift during Daylight Saving Time (DST) where observed â check a live source for current offsets.
| City |
Country |
Standard Offset |
DST Offset |
Notes |
| Honolulu |
USA (Hawaii) |
UTCâ10 |
No DST |
Hawaii never observes DST |
| Anchorage |
USA (Alaska) |
UTCâ9 |
UTCâ8 |
DST observed MarâNov |
| Los Angeles |
USA |
UTCâ8 |
UTCâ7 |
Pacific Time |
| Denver |
USA |
UTCâ7 |
UTCâ6 |
Mountain Time |
| Chicago |
USA |
UTCâ6 |
UTCâ5 |
Central Time |
| New York |
USA |
UTCâ5 |
UTCâ4 |
Eastern Time |
| São Paulo |
Brazil |
UTCâ3 |
UTCâ2 (summer) |
Southern Hemisphere DST |
| London |
UK |
UTC±0 |
UTC+1 |
GMT / BST |
| Paris |
France |
UTC+1 |
UTC+2 |
CET / CEST |
| Berlin |
Germany |
UTC+1 |
UTC+2 |
CET / CEST |
| Cairo |
Egypt |
UTC+2 |
No DST |
Egypt suspended DST |
| Istanbul |
Turkey |
UTC+3 |
No DST |
Permanently UTC+3 since 2016 |
| Moscow |
Russia |
UTC+3 |
No DST |
Russia abolished DST in 2014 |
| Dubai |
UAE |
UTC+4 |
No DST |
Gulf Standard Time |
| Karachi |
Pakistan |
UTC+5 |
No DST |
PKT |
| Delhi |
India |
UTC+5:30 |
No DST |
India has a 30-min offset |
| Dhaka |
Bangladesh |
UTC+6 |
No DST |
BST |
| Bangkok |
Thailand |
UTC+7 |
No DST |
Indochina Time |
| Singapore |
Singapore |
UTC+8 |
No DST |
SST |
| Beijing |
China |
UTC+8 |
No DST |
All of China uses one time zone |
| Tokyo |
Japan |
UTC+9 |
No DST |
JST â Japan has never used DST |
| Sydney |
Australia |
UTC+10 |
UTC+11 |
AEST / AEDT (OctâApr DST) |
| Auckland |
New Zealand |
UTC+12 |
UTC+13 |
NZST / NZDT |
| Fiji |
Fiji |
UTC+12 |
UTC+13 |
DST observed NovâJan |
Converting between two cities: Subtract the origin offset from the destination offset to find the difference. Example: New York (UTCâ5) to Tokyo (UTC+9) = +14 hours.
Clothing Size Conversions
Women's Shoes
| US |
UK |
EU |
Japan (cm) |
| 5 |
2.5 |
35 |
22 |
| 5.5 |
3 |
35.5 |
22.5 |
| 6 |
3.5 |
36 |
23 |
| 6.5 |
4 |
37 |
23.5 |
| 7 |
4.5 |
37.5 |
24 |
| 7.5 |
5 |
38 |
24.5 |
| 8 |
5.5 |
38.5 |
25 |
| 8.5 |
6 |
39 |
25.5 |
| 9 |
6.5 |
40 |
26 |
| 9.5 |
7 |
40.5 |
26.5 |
| 10 |
7.5 |
41 |
27 |
| 11 |
8.5 |
42 |
28 |
Men's Shoes
| US |
UK |
EU |
Japan (cm) |
| 6 |
5.5 |
39 |
24.5 |
| 6.5 |
6 |
39.5 |
25 |
| 7 |
6.5 |
40 |
25.5 |
| 7.5 |
7 |
40.5 |
26 |
| 8 |
7.5 |
41 |
26.5 |
| 8.5 |
8 |
42 |
27 |
| 9 |
8.5 |
42.5 |
27.5 |
| 9.5 |
9 |
43 |
28 |
| 10 |
9.5 |
44 |
28.5 |
| 10.5 |
10 |
44.5 |
29 |
| 11 |
10.5 |
45 |
29.5 |
| 12 |
11.5 |
46 |
30.5 |
| 13 |
12.5 |
47 |
31.5 |
Women's Clothing (Tops / Dresses)
| US |
UK |
EU |
Asian (approx.) |
| 0 (XS) |
4 |
32 |
XS / 155/80A |
| 2 (XS) |
6 |
34 |
XS / 155/80A |
| 4 (S) |
8 |
36 |
S / 160/84A |
| 6 (S) |
10 |
38 |
S / 160/84A |
| 8 (M) |
12 |
40 |
M / 165/88A |
| 10 (M) |
14 |
42 |
M / 165/88A |
| 12 (L) |
16 |
44 |
L / 170/92A |
| 14 (L) |
18 |
46 |
L / 170/92A |
| 16 (XL) |
20 |
48 |
XL / 175/96A |
| 18 (2XL) |
22 |
50 |
2XL / 180/100A |
| 20 (3XL) |
24 |
52 |
3XL |
Asian sizing varies significantly by brand and country. Measurements in the format height/bust are common in China/Korea.
Men's Shirts (Neck / Chest)
| US/UK Neck |
EU Neck (cm) |
US/UK Chest |
EU Chest (cm) |
Size Label |
| 14 |
36 |
34 |
86 |
XS |
| 14.5 |
37 |
36 |
91 |
S |
| 15 |
38 |
38 |
96 |
S |
| 15.5 |
39â40 |
40 |
101 |
M |
| 16 |
41 |
42 |
107 |
L |
| 16.5 |
42 |
44 |
112 |
L |
| 17 |
43 |
46 |
117 |
XL |
| 17.5 |
44â45 |
48 |
122 |
2XL |
| 18 |
46 |
50 |
127 |
3XL |
Men's Pants (Waist)
| US/UK (inches) |
EU (cm) |
Asian (approx.) |
| 28 |
71 |
S |
| 30 |
76 |
M |
| 32 |
81 |
L |
| 34 |
86 |
XL |
| 36 |
91 |
2XL |
| 38 |
96 |
3XL |
| 40 |
102 |
4XL |
Children's Clothing (Age-Based)
| Age |
US Size |
EU Size |
Height (cm) |
Weight (kg approx.) |
| 0â3 months |
3M |
56â62 |
56â62 |
3â5 |
| 3â6 months |
6M |
62â68 |
62â68 |
5â7 |
| 6â12 months |
12M |
68â80 |
68â80 |
7â10 |
| 12â18 months |
18M |
80â86 |
80â86 |
10â12 |
| 2 years |
2T |
92 |
86â92 |
12â14 |
| 3 years |
3T |
98 |
92â98 |
14â16 |
| 4 years |
4T |
104 |
98â104 |
16â18 |
| 5 years |
5 |
110 |
104â110 |
18â20 |
| 6 years |
6 |
116 |
110â116 |
20â22 |
| 7 years |
7 |
122 |
116â122 |
22â25 |
| 8 years |
8 |
128 |
122â128 |
25â28 |
| 10 years |
10 |
140 |
134â140 |
30â34 |
| 12 years |
12 |
152 |
146â152 |
38â43 |
Ring Sizes
| US |
UK / Australia |
EU (mm circumference) |
Diameter (mm) |
| 4 |
H |
46.8 |
14.9 |
| 4.5 |
I |
47.8 |
15.3 |
| 5 |
JâK |
49.3 |
15.7 |
| 5.5 |
KâL |
50.6 |
16.1 |
| 6 |
LâM |
51.9 |
16.5 |
| 6.5 |
MâN |
53.1 |
16.9 |
| 7 |
NâO |
54.4 |
17.3 |
| 7.5 |
OâP |
55.7 |
17.7 |
| 8 |
PâQ |
57.0 |
18.1 |
| 8.5 |
QâR |
58.3 |
18.6 |
| 9 |
RâS |
59.5 |
18.9 |
| 9.5 |
SâT |
60.8 |
19.4 |
| 10 |
TâU |
62.1 |
19.8 |
| 11 |
VâW |
64.6 |
20.6 |
| 12 |
XâY |
67.2 |
21.4 |
To measure ring size at home: Wrap a thin strip of paper around the base of your finger, mark where it overlaps, measure the length in mm â that is your circumference. Match to the EU column above.
Paper Sizes
ISO 216 "A" Series
| Size |
mm |
inches |
Common Use |
| A0 |
841 Ã 1189 |
33.1 Ã 46.8 |
Large posters, architectural drawings |
| A1 |
594 Ã 841 |
23.4 Ã 33.1 |
Posters, flip charts |
| A2 |
420 Ã 594 |
16.5 Ã 23.4 |
Posters, large diagrams |
| A3 |
297 Ã 420 |
11.7 Ã 16.5 |
Tabloid equivalent, spreadsheets |
| A4 |
210 Ã 297 |
8.3 Ã 11.7 |
Standard document (most of world) |
| A5 |
148 Ã 210 |
5.8 Ã 8.3 |
Notepads, small booklets |
| A6 |
105 Ã 148 |
4.1 Ã 5.8 |
Postcards, index cards |
Each A size is exactly half of the one above. A0 has an area of exactly 1 square meter.
North American Sizes
| Name |
mm |
inches |
Common Use |
| Letter |
215.9 Ã 279.4 |
8.5 Ã 11 |
Standard US/Canada document |
| Legal |
215.9 Ã 355.6 |
8.5 Ã 14 |
Legal documents, contracts |
| Tabloid / Ledger |
279.4 Ã 431.8 |
11 Ã 17 |
Newspapers, large spreadsheets |
Birthstones
| Month |
Traditional |
Modern |
| January |
Garnet |
Garnet |
| February |
Amethyst |
Amethyst |
| March |
Bloodstone |
Aquamarine |
| April |
Diamond |
Diamond |
| May |
Emerald |
Emerald |
| June |
Pearl |
Alexandrite (also Pearl, Moonstone) |
| July |
Ruby |
Ruby |
| August |
Sardonyx |
Peridot (also Spinel) |
| September |
Sapphire |
Sapphire |
| October |
Opal |
Tourmaline |
| November |
Topaz |
Citrine |
| December |
Turquoise |
Blue Topaz (also Tanzanite, Zircon) |
Traditional list from the 1912 American National Jewelers Association. Modern list revised by the American Gem Society.
Anniversary Gifts: Traditional & Modern
| Year |
Traditional |
Modern |
| 1st |
Paper |
Clocks |
| 2nd |
Cotton |
China |
| 3rd |
Leather |
Crystal / Glass |
| 4th |
Linen / Silk |
Appliances |
| 5th |
Wood |
Silverware |
| 6th |
Candy / Iron |
Wood |
| 7th |
Wool / Copper |
Desk Sets |
| 8th |
Pottery / Bronze |
Linens / Lace |
| 9th |
Pottery / Willow |
Leather |
| 10th |
Tin / Aluminum |
Diamond Jewelry |
| 11th |
Steel |
Fashion Jewelry |
| 12th |
Silk / Linen |
Pearls |
| 13th |
Lace |
Textiles / Furs |
| 14th |
Ivory |
Gold Jewelry |
| 15th |
Crystal |
Watches |
| 20th |
China |
Platinum |
| 25th |
Silver |
Silver |
| 30th |
Pearl |
Diamond |
| 35th |
Coral |
Jade |
| 40th |
Ruby |
Ruby |
| 45th |
Sapphire |
Sapphire |
| 50th |
Gold |
Gold |
| 55th |
Emerald |
Emerald |
| 60th |
Diamond |
Diamond |
| 65th |
Blue Sapphire |
Blue Sapphire |
| 70th |
Platinum |
Platinum |
| 75th |
Diamond / Gold |
Diamond / Gold |
Tipping Customs by Country
| Country |
Restaurants |
Taxis |
Other |
Notes |
| USA |
15â20% (mandatory in practice) |
15â20% |
Bartenders $1â2/drink; hotel housekeeping $2â5/night |
Tipping is effectively compulsory; servers may earn below minimum wage |
| Canada |
15â20% |
10â15% |
Similar to USA |
Tax-inclusive prices; tip on pre-tax amount |
| UK |
10â15% (check for service charge) |
Round up or 10% |
Not expected for drinks at pub bar |
Service charge is often added automatically â check bill first |
| France |
Service compris (included) â add 1â5% if pleased |
Round up |
Not widely expected |
"Pourboire" is optional and truly appreciated rather than expected |
| Germany |
5â10%; round up to nearest euro |
Round up |
Cafes: round up |
Say "stimmt so" (keep the change) when paying; do not leave coins on table |
| Japan |
Never tip |
Never tip |
Never tip |
Tipping is considered rude; can cause embarrassment or be refused |
| China |
Not traditional; increasingly 10â15% in tourist areas |
Not expected |
Hotel: not expected |
High-end hotels and Western restaurants may add service charge |
| Australia |
Not required; 10% appreciated |
Not required |
Not required |
Minimum wage is high; tipping is optional and not expected |
| Mexico |
10â15% |
10% |
Hotel staff: 20â50 pesos |
Always tip in cash; many workers earn very low base wages |
| Brazil |
10% service charge usually included |
Round up |
Not widely expected |
Check bill for "taxa de serviço" before adding extra |
| UAE / Dubai |
10â15% in restaurants |
Round up |
Hotel: 10 AED per service |
Service charge often included in hotels; appreciate the gesture |
| India |
10% in restaurants |
Round up |
Hotel porter: â¹20â50 |
Varies widely by location; street food/local chai: not expected |
| Italy |
Coperto (cover charge) is normal; no further tip required |
Round up |
Espresso bar: leave coins |
Coperto is â¹1â3 per person; it is for bread and table service |
| Spain |
5â10% appreciated; not required |
Round up |
Not widely expected |
Spanish locals tip modestly; tourists expected to be generous |
| South Africa |
10â15% |
10% |
Petrol station attendants: R5â10 |
Service industry wages are low; tipping is important |
Battery Sizes and Common Uses
| Size |
Dimensions (mm) |
Voltage |
Chemistry |
Common Uses |
| AAA |
10.5 dia à 44.5 |
1.5V |
Alkaline / NiMH |
Remote controls, small toys, flashlights, blood pressure monitors |
| AA |
14.5 dia à 50.5 |
1.5V |
Alkaline / NiMH |
Most common â cameras, clocks, TV remotes, wireless mice, flashlights |
| C |
26.2 dia à 50.0 |
1.5V |
Alkaline |
Portable radios, flashlights, toys, baby monitors |
| D |
34.2 dia à 61.5 |
1.5V |
Alkaline |
High-drain devices: large flashlights, boomboxes, emergency radios |
| 9V |
26.5 Ã 17.5 Ã 48.5 |
9V |
Alkaline / Lithium |
Smoke detectors, guitar effects pedals, multimeters, walkie-talkies |
| CR2032 |
20 dia à 3.2 |
3V |
Lithium (coin cell) |
Watches, key fobs, calculators, computer CMOS memory, small LED lights |
| CR2025 |
20 dia à 2.5 |
3V |
Lithium (coin cell) |
Watches, key fobs, calculators â thinner version of CR2032 |
Notes:
- Rechargeable NiMH batteries output ~1.2V vs alkaline's 1.5V â compatible with most devices
- CR2032 and CR2025 are interchangeable in many devices (same diameter, slightly different thickness)
- "CR" = Lithium chemistry; first two digits = diameter; last two = thickness in tenths of mm
Light Bulb Equivalency Chart
LED equivalents produce the same light (lumens) as old incandescent bulbs while using significantly less power.
| Incandescent (Old) |
LED Equivalent |
Lumens |
Best Use |
| 25W |
2â3W |
250 lm |
Night lights, decorative lamps |
| 40W |
5â6W |
450 lm |
Bedside lamps, closets |
| 60W |
8â10W |
800 lm |
Standard table and floor lamps |
| 75W |
10â13W |
1,100 lm |
Kitchens, workspaces |
| 100W |
14â18W |
1,600 lm |
Bright overhead lighting |
| 150W |
22â26W |
2,600 lm |
Very bright workspace, garage |
Color Temperature Reference:
- 2700Kâ3000K: Warm white (yellowish) â cozy, residential rooms
- 3500Kâ4100K: Cool white (neutral) â kitchens, offices
- 5000Kâ6500K: Daylight (bluish-white) â workshops, reading tasks
CRI (Color Rendering Index): 90+ CRI renders colors most accurately. Relevant for art studios, makeup areas.
Mohs Hardness Scale
The Mohs scale rates a mineral's resistance to scratching, from 1 (softest) to 10 (hardest). A material can scratch anything softer than itself.
| Hardness |
Mineral |
Common Reference Object |
| 1 |
Talc |
Easily scratched by fingernail; feels greasy |
| 2 |
Gypsum |
Can be scratched by fingernail (hardness 2.5) |
| 2.5 |
â |
Fingernail |
| 3 |
Calcite |
Scratched easily by a copper coin |
| 3.5 |
â |
Copper coin |
| 4 |
Fluorite |
Scratched by a steel knife but not a fingernail |
| 5 |
Apatite |
Barely scratched by a steel knife |
| 5.5 |
â |
Steel knife / glass |
| 6 |
Orthoclase feldspar |
Scratches glass easily |
| 6.5 |
â |
Steel file |
| 7 |
Quartz |
Scratches glass and most steels; common sand |
| 8 |
Topaz |
Scratched only by corundum and diamond |
| 9 |
Corundum (sapphire/ruby) |
Scratched only by diamond |
| 10 |
Diamond |
Scratches everything; hardest natural material |
Practical applications:
- Window glass: ~5.5 â can be scratched by keys (which are usually steel, ~6)
- Steel file: ~6.5 â useful field test tool
- Common sand (quartz): 7 â reason why sand scratches car paint (paint ~2â3)
- Human tooth enamel: ~5
- Human bone: ~5
pH Scale: 0â14
The pH scale measures acidity vs. alkalinity. 7 = neutral; below 7 = acidic; above 7 = basic (alkaline).
| pH |
Substance |
Category |
| 0 |
Battery acid (HâSOâ) |
Strongly acidic |
| 1 |
Hydrochloric acid (gastric acid) |
Strongly acidic |
| 2 |
Lemon juice, vinegar |
Strongly acidic |
| 2.5 |
Soft drinks (cola) |
Strongly acidic |
| 3 |
Orange juice, apple juice |
Acidic |
| 3.5 |
Tomato juice |
Acidic |
| 4 |
Beer, wine |
Acidic |
| 4.5 |
Tomatoes, acid rain |
Acidic |
| 5 |
Black coffee, bananas |
Mildly acidic |
| 5.5 |
Urine (typical) |
Mildly acidic |
| 6 |
Milk |
Mildly acidic |
| 6.5 |
Saliva |
Near neutral |
| 7.0 |
Pure water |
Neutral |
| 7.4 |
Human blood |
Very slightly basic |
| 8 |
Seawater, baking soda solution |
Mildly basic |
| 8.5 |
Antacid tablets |
Mildly basic |
| 9 |
Soap, hand sanitizer |
Basic |
| 10 |
Milk of magnesia |
Moderately basic |
| 11 |
Ammonia (household cleaner) |
Basic |
| 12 |
Soapy water, bleach (diluted) |
Strongly basic |
| 13 |
Oven cleaner, lye |
Strongly basic |
| 14 |
Sodium hydroxide (NaOH) |
Strongly basic |
Notes:
- Each step on the pH scale is a factor of 10 in concentration (pH 4 is 10x more acidic than pH 5)
- The human body tightly regulates blood pH at ~7.35â7.45; deviations of ±0.2 are medically significant
- Soil pH affects plant growth: most vegetables prefer 6.0â7.0; blueberries prefer 4.5â5.5
- Swimming pools are maintained at pH 7.2â7.6 to prevent skin/eye irritation and equipment corrosion
See also: 15-reference-tables/cooking-measurements.md, 15-reference-tables/unit-conversions.md