Was is always a verb. In that example, it's a linking verb.
Yes. The word "was" is linking the "kangaroo" to the description "five feet tall."
I had to walk fifteen miles uphill both ways, in snow five feet deep.
Set your fence boundary at least five feet inside of your neighbor's border.
The speech was so uninteresting it began to enervate anyone within a five-mile radius of the podium.
Quīnque pedēs is a Latin equivalent of the English phrase "five feet." The masculine plural third declension noun looks different in the ablative, dative and genitive cases as the prepositional object or indirect object quīnque pedum ("with five feet," "to five feet") and as the possessive object quīnque pedibus ("of five feet"). The pronunciation will be "KWEEN-kwey peh-DEYS" in the nominative case, as the subject of the phrase or sentence, in Church and classical Latin.
Sort of... an alliteration is when you have a lot of the same letters or letter sounds in a row. So I guess, but not really.
There are 15 feet are in five yards.
1930
speech
The error is the lack of a comma after "miles." The corrected sentence would be: "Standing 850 feet above the plains with a circumference of five miles, Stone Mountain is the largest exposed mound of granite in the world."
60 inches are in five feet :) "XD
Five miles = 26,400 feet.