Common otters are usually about two-three feet wide, depending how fat they areXP How many cms are there in a foot? There is 24 inches in a foot and 2 and a half cms in an inch, meaning there would be 49 cm in a foot, and 49 x 2 = 98. A common otter is about 98 cms.
About 5 cms
The names for an otter is Scientific Name: Lutra canadensis Common Name: River otter
An example of one of these flat wooden dolls in the British Museum is just over 19 cms (7.5 inches) tall; another example in the Brooklyn Museum is just over 20 cms (8 inches) tall and 5.2 cms (2 inches) wide. A doll in the Metropolitan Museum of Art is 23 cms (just over 9 inches) tall and another in the Kelsey Museum is 21 cms tall by 4.75 cms wide (8.25 by just under 2 inches).
It is a common noun not a proper noun because it's is not named specifically . Harry sea otter is a proper noun but not a common noun.
CMS 1500
There is as such no standard of scarf size in market. various retailer sell scarves of different sizes. But most of scarves are of size 140-170 Cms long to 15-30 Cms wide
they both hated jews
River Otter (3 species), Sea Otter, Giant Otter, Hairy Nosed Otter, Japanese Otter, European Otter, Spotted Necked Otter, Marine Otter, African Clawless Otter, Oriental Small Clawed Otter. 13 species
(55 cms) x (40 cms) x (20 cms) equals 2,685 cubic inches.
Only one species of Lutrinae, the otter subfamily, inhabits Ireland. The Eurasian river otter (Lutra lutra) lives throughout most of Europe, including Ireland. In Ireland's case, the Eurasian river otter is quite common.
As of July 2014, the market cap for CMS Energy Corporation (CMS) is $8,238,310,186.53.
Sea otters are the only species in their genus, Enhydra. However, there are thirteen species of otter in the subfamily Lutrinae; these include the Marine otter, the North-American river otter, the Neotropical river otter, the Southern river otter, the Eurasian otter, the Hairy-nosed otter, the Asian small-clawed otter, the African clawless otter, the Congo clawless otter, the Giant otter, the Smooth-coated otter, the Spotted-necked otter, and (of course) the Sea otter.