It is 0.59055 inches, although in ordinary circumstances it would be impossible to measure to such precision.
It is 2/10 past the one inch mark on a ruler.
A millimeter, as almost every 12 inch ruler has centimeters and millimeters on the opposite side of where inches are marked.
If 1 inch is 2.54cm then 2.54 x 11 = 27.94cm's Nearly a ruler
You will not find 0.12 inches mark on the normal rule, but0.125 inches is 1/8th of an inch. Is that close enough?
Look at the markings between zero inches and one inch. There should be a larger mark right in the middle between the two. That's 1/2 (one half) inch. Right in the middle between 0 and 1/2 is a smaller mark - that's the 1/4 (one quarter) inch mark. On the other hand, the mark halfway between 1/2 and 1 inch is the 3/4 (three quarter) inch mark. In other words, the distance from zero to one inch can be divided into four equal steps with three marks in between; those are, respectively, 1/4 inch, 2/4 inch (= 1/2 inch), and 3/4 inch. 4/4 inch is equal to 1 inch.
11/16
inch ruler
It depends on what the ruler's made out of. A plastic ruler would inevitably weigh less than a steel ruler.
an inch ruler is 2.5cm and a cm is the same but smaller.....saichona
It's almost exactly 1/5 of the way from the beginning of the ruler to the 1-inch mark.
The answer depends on the measurement units used for 8.3
That depends on the ruler. If you refer to a 1 foot ruler, divided in inches and sub-inch divisions, then 0.39 inch is a more than a quarter inch, and less than a half inch.
Five eighths of an inch on a ruler would be located between the half-inch mark and the three-quarter inch mark.
where is .39 on a ruler
with a ruler
It depends on your ruler and what units are on your ruler. To measure to the nearest inch just find the inch measurement and round up or down to get to the nearest inch in your measurement is between two whole numbers.
It depends upon how much the ruler weighs. With the information that you provided, it is impossible to come to an answer. I would suggest that you put the ruler onto a scale, to measure its weight.