Quantity of electrical energy.
Actually none! Why? "cc" measures the quantity in volume while "inches" measures the quantity in length. You can't convert "length" units to "volume" units since they are not related to another.
The weight cannot be 195 grams nor kilograms because these are measures of mass, not weight.The weight will depend on the quantity of platinum and the force of gravity.The weight cannot be 195 grams nor kilograms because these are measures of mass, not weight.The weight will depend on the quantity of platinum and the force of gravity.The weight cannot be 195 grams nor kilograms because these are measures of mass, not weight.The weight will depend on the quantity of platinum and the force of gravity.The weight cannot be 195 grams nor kilograms because these are measures of mass, not weight.The weight will depend on the quantity of platinum and the force of gravity.
An isoquant is a graph showing the same quantity of output for various combinations of inputs. Since these are all measures of quantity, they must all be positive.
Inter-quartile range, other percentile ranges, mean absolute variation, variance, standard error, standard deviation are all possible measures.
PRIMATIVE CELLThe unit cell formed by the primative a,b,c and which has only one lattice point is called primative cell
PRIMATIVE CELLThe unit cell formed by the primative a,b,c and which has only one lattice point is called primative cell
Time
Using 'a raft of' preceding a noun is a term for a 'large quantity' of that thing.
Volume.
Quantity of electrical energy.
a cubic meter measures volume. (ex. how much water in a cylinder.)
it is complicated
it is complicated
Actually none! Why? "cc" measures the quantity in volume while "inches" measures the quantity in length. You can't convert "length" units to "volume" units since they are not related to another.
the quantity of matter can be measured by its volume (a measuring flask), weight (a beam balance), and count (tally). ============================
An ammeter measures the amount of current flowing through an electrical circuit. It measures amperage.