Well, it does matter exactly what weight of paper you are using as well as whether or not it is coated...
But, unless you are ready and waiting with a micrometer and need an answer down to the millimeter, you can figure on a ream of paper (500 sheets) being about 2" thick.
A package of 500 sheets.
5oo sheets of paper equals one ream!
500 Sheets
Ten reams of paper, at 8.5 centimetres tall each, would measure 8.5 x 10 = 85 centimetres.Each sheet of paper within a ream would measure 8.5 / 500 = 0.017 centimetres, or 1.7 millimetres.
Ream is the answer
With reference to paper count 1 ream of paper contains 500 sheets.
no i don't really know
500 sheets of paper is the International Standard for a ream of paper.
A Ream is a measure of the NUMBER of sheets of paper (500 sheets) How thick that would be will depend on the weight of the paper. Heavier paper is thicker.
Ream of paper not rim of paper in one ream There are 500 sheets of paper
Ten reams of paper, at 8.5 centimetres tall each, would measure 8.5 x 10 = 85 centimetres.Each sheet of paper within a ream would measure 8.5 / 500 = 0.017 centimetres, or 1.7 millimetres.
Ream is the answer
With reference to paper count 1 ream of paper contains 500 sheets.
no i don't really know
500 sheets of paper is the International Standard for a ream of paper.
The collective noun 'ream' is used for a ream of paper or a ream of bureaucrats.
A twentieth of a ream is equal to 25 sheets of paper. A standard ream typically contains 500 sheets.
A box of paper is typically referred to as a ream. A ream usually contains 500 sheets of paper.
A ream is a fixed unit of measure, currently set at 500 sheets of paper. At one time it was 480. A printer's ream is 516 sheets.
A quire of paper is 25 sheets, and a ream is 500 sheets. A ream is an international standard.