Yes you can, on a website that has rulers you can print rulers from.
It is a graphic scale.
ruler
its vertical ruler if you look in the Microsoft office 2007 premium video edition on word 4 it gives you the correct answer
A line gauge is a ruler with various print-related measuring units on it, such as inches, points, and picas. They are usually designed with the measurement starting at the edge of the ruler. (Many "commercial" rulers have a small space between the edge of the ruler and the actual first 1/16 inch.) In short, it's a ruler that's more helpful to a printer than a regular one you'd find at staples.
It was an Ultra Rare card in Magic Ruler/Spell Ruler, but it was also the cover card for the Pegasus starter deck and therefore there's thousands and thousands in print. So it's an easy card to obtain with little value.
A WOOD RULER A STONE RULER A IRON RULER A DIAMOND RULER A EMERALD RULER
web, or print, look at Page Layout tab for Page Stup section and locate Margins, then press triangle below and choose option, if you want manually to adjust then in View tab click before Ruler to display Ruler select text you want to adjust or place insertation point in paragraph, then click on triangle on Ruler and move it
she is the best ruler because she loves Canadian bacon.
That's a lot like asking "How many marks are there on a ruler in an interval of 5 inches ?" There is no standard 'set' of meridians. Various maps and globes print more meridians or fewer, and some print none at all. A meridian can be printed on a map at any longitude you name. There is no fixed number of them.
No; he was the ruler.
British ruler, japan ruler, German ruler
An absolute ruler is a ruler that has unlimited power over their country.