a luler.
Do what I do with my snakes - use a piece of string to get the approximate length from nose to tail - then lay the string on a ruler to get the measurement.
There are no kilometer rulers. -- If your ruler is 1 foot long, then you have to lay down 3,281 of them end-to-end to reach 1 kilometer. -- If your ruler is 1 yard long, then you have to lay down 1,094 of them end-to-end to reach 1 kilometer. -- If your ruler is 1 meter long, then you have to lay down 1,000 of them end-to-end to reach 1 kilometer.
You need to get a flexible measuring ruler... Lay them on the ground... And measure them that way.
Lay a ruler across the coin and make sure it measures from one edge through the center to the other edge. Read the diameter from the ruler.
The printed ruler on map is called the scale. It shows distance per inch. You can take a strip of paper, lay it alongside the ruler, mark the paper--- then, take the marked paper to measure distance between two points on the map.
The printed ruler on map is called the scale. It shows distance per inch. You can take a strip of paper, lay it alongside the ruler, mark the paper--- then, take the marked paper to measure distance between two points on the map.
The numbers on a modular brick ruler represent how many rows or coarses in 16 inches. There are 6 coarses of modular brick in 16 inches so the number 6 on the ruler would properly space the coarsing to hit at 16 inch inervals. Oversize brick would lay out on a 5. Utility brick lay out on 4. Some glazed tile on a 3. Glass block and concrete block on 2.
A WOOD RULER A STONE RULER A IRON RULER A DIAMOND RULER A EMERALD RULER
Wrap the strip of paper around the plate or can and mark it where it completes a full circle around the object. Then lay the strip on a flat surface and measure the marked length using the ruler. That length is the perimeter (circumference) of the round object.
she is the best ruler because she loves Canadian bacon.
No; he was the ruler.