In the photographic trade, even outside of the US, people still routinely use imperial units to describe photographic sizing; 6x4, 7x5, 8x6 etc. Some of us even still use the old descriptions; 4R, 5R, 6R, 4S etc. People come into my shop and ask for a 7x5 frame, not an 18x13 or 180x130 frame
Also, while centimeters are not used generally in engineering, they are used in radar. Equipment operating around 10 GHz (X band), such as airborne primary weather radars, are generally known as "3cm radar", those operating around 3 GHz (S band), such as ground based surveillance radar, are known as "10cm radar".
Show me a piece of waveguide, and I could tell you what band it operates in and what probably what the radar was used for.
PS: and you know that little screw hole on the bottom of your camera that allows you to attach a tripod? Well, that screw hole has a ¼" British Standard Whitworth thread.
Even today, the latest digital cameras on the market made in Japan, China, Taiwan or Korea, are all equipped with the same ¼ BSW threaded hole that the 1950's 35mm film camera had.