Want this question answered?
The width of the line drawn by a ball-point pen is the measurement I assume you meant. Though it is often given in fractions of a millimetre, fine, medium or thick is usually used.
The unit of measurement used to find perimeters can vary depending on the context and preference. In general, inches would be used in the imperial system of measurement, while centimeters would be used in the metric system of measurement.
Its best to use a caliper but its fine if you use a cloth tape. Measure 4'6" above the base of the trunk and take your measurement at that point. That is the true caliper of the tree.
You should use a ruler to measure a fork. Once you have the measurement, it's probably most convenient to describe it in units of centimeters or millimeters, but meters will also work just fine.
Inches or centimetres are fine for a book's dimensions. Measure the width, height and depth to determine the volume. If you are talking about the length of the book's narrative, word count is probably the most accurate.
Only the rough measurement, the fine measure is the Minnie
It indicates the roughness of the paper, like f is for fine.
A scale does a fine job of making that measurement.
no.
Fine Jewlery.
between 150-180. anywhere in that area is fine
Very fine sediments are known as silt.
The width of the line drawn by a ball-point pen is the measurement I assume you meant. Though it is often given in fractions of a millimetre, fine, medium or thick is usually used.
It is known for silverware and fine jewerly
That would be - according to official Pantone+ colour specification - Cyan 100% Magenta 87.8% C100 M88 will do fine!
Any oil that meets VW specification 504.00 is fine. If you take the car to the dealer it will come back with Castrol Edge 5W30 in it.
Horace Edgar Rose has written: 'The measurement of particle size in very fine powders'