[Vocabulary] I'm six foot two and a half

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englishhobby

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Why does the boy in 'Catcher in the Rye' use the singular 'foot', not plural 'feet'? What does this mean: I'm six foot two and a half?

I was sixteen then, and I'm seventeen now, and sometimes I act like I'm about thirteen. It's really ironical, because I'm six foot two and a half and I have gray hair. I really do.
 
When combined with inches, we don't pluralize foot.

She's just five feet tall. Her sister is five-foot two, and her father is five-eleven. The latter is another way to say 5'11" or "five-foot eleven".
 
Thanks a lot. And what does 'and a half' mean? Is it 'and a half of an inch'?
 
In the US it's common to use the plural: "I'm six feet two inches tall."
 
It's not wrong in BrE, but foot is more common with inches, though we're mostly metric nowadays, officially at least among older age groups.
 
In the US it's common to use the plural: "I'm six feet two inches tall."

It's OK when you include "inches". I wouldn't say I'm six feet two.
 
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