That's just an interesting coincidence. Actually I would expect this to vary between different people; not all people have exactly the same proportions.
That's just an interesting coincidence. Actually I would expect this to vary between different people; not all people have exactly the same proportions.
That's just an interesting coincidence. Actually I would expect this to vary between different people; not all people have exactly the same proportions.
That's just an interesting coincidence. Actually I would expect this to vary between different people; not all people have exactly the same proportions.
That's just an interesting coincidence. Actually I would expect this to vary between different people; not all people have exactly the same proportions.
yes first i read thisinformation then i test that bout i want to know the reason>> why your thumb is the same length of your nose.
tip of thumb to tip of pinky when outstrethed
They are approximately the same, depending on how long your forearm is. A cubit is the length of your forearm from your elbow to your fingertip, about 18 inches or 44 cm. A span is the length from your thumb to your little finger with your fingers spread out as far as possible, about 9 inches or 22 cm.
The answer to, "Segments that have the same length" Is Congruent Segments!
Sides with the same length are congruent.
Yes.
yes first i read thisinformation then i test that bout i want to know the reason>> why your thumb is the same length of your nose.
Yes, your ear is the same size as your nose... They have the same growth speed also, they are the same length.
King Henry I of England
Big Toe
no, inch is customary and is about the same length of an adults tip of the thumb to the first joint, a millimeter (mm) is about the width of the tip of a thumb tac
Doing nothing -- Standing around with your thumb up your nose.
My thumb, from the palm-thumb joint to the thumb-tip is 7.0 cm.
yes
yea mine did
The ratio of the human thumb to the length of the arm is usually 1 to 15. The thumb's length can fit into the size of the arm an approximately 15 times or more.
King Henry 1 (1069-1135) decreed the measurement to be from the tip of his nose to the thumb of his outstretched arm. Prior to that it was the length of a mans belt or girdle