The point on the horse is the height measurement taken is the withers.
Shoulder measured by the unit of hamds
The measurement is taken from the point above grade at which height the foundation will be at completion, taking into account the type of foundation material and the frost line, and the depth of the crawl space or basement, if any.
To transfer elevations, BM + BS = HI - FS = Elevation BM - Benchmark BS - Backsight, or a measurement taken on a benchmark HI - height of the instrument FS - Foresight, or a measurement taken on an unknown point
The length of an American Indian horse will vary according to genetics and nutrition. A horses length is measured from the point of the shoulder to the point of the buttock, the head and neck are never included in a horses length measurement and this should always be taken into account.
A horse is measured in 'hands' - 1 hand = 4 inches (10.2 cm) The measurement is taken from the ground to the top of the horse's withers.
The definition of distance is a measurement from point A to point B. As an element of travel, the time taken to go from point A to point B is the time of travel, or the time taken to cover the distance at a certain speed.
A horse is technically measured from the ground to the highest point on it's withers (the small hump like bit on the back just at the bottom of the neck) If being measured officially the horse has to be taken to a special measuring block and needs to be stood square and relaxed. The UK association for doing this is the Joint measurement board (JMB)
The traditional measuring unit for a horse is a 'hand', which equals 4 inches. A measurement will be in hands/inches - for e.g. 15.2 is 15 hands and 2 inches, or 62 inches In countries that work with the metric system, a horse is measured in metres and centimetres, for e.g. 1,58m. Measurement is taken at the withers.
A horse is measured in "hands". A hand is 4 inches. The measurement is taken from the ground to the top height of the horses withers. If a horse measures 65 inches, he is 16.1 hands. A pony is 14.2 hands or shorter.
The horse's withers are the top of its shoulders, where the neck joins the body. This is where the horse is measured (height is taken from the withers not the head) and also where the saddle sits.
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The difference in level between the height of the mould and that of the highest point of the subsided concrete is measured. This difference in height in mm. is taken as Slump of Concrete.
That type of measurement would be referred to as a qualitative measurement.