To know if you want to take the answer its all right thak my answer it is 5 inch or 5 cm thank about it you will get it thank a ruler and put the ruler by the chalk and your answer is 5 inch or 5 cm
You should use the internationally recognised units (ISO) of measure based on the Metre and for a piece of chalk I would suggest using millimetres (thousandths of a meter) or centimetres (hundredths of a metre) units.
That depends on the size of the piece of chalk.
Chalk, solid 2.5 Chalk, lumpy 1.4 Chalk, fine 1.1
There is no standard size for a piece of chalk.
Chalk (CaCO3) has five atoms in the molecule.
1.82g
pinch
Meters
The leanth of a chalk is 5 cm or if you want it like lunch it is 5 inch to thank you for Taking part ππβΊοΈπ ππ€
chalk comes from chalk deposits the white cliffs of dover is one then the grind it into powder then they press it into molds of chalk then they sell it
The word 'chalk' is a neuter noun, a word for a thing that has no gender.
He wanted a piece of chalk lit
No chalk is not solouble. When chalk is put in water the water becomes a suspension ie the particles of chalk keep floating in water.
No, melting chalk is impossible, but dissolving chalk is possible. This can be done when you mix the chalk with some liquid and there you have it...DISSOLVED CHALK IN A LIQUID!
1 inch
It is a fraction of the length of a piece of string!
chalk
colored chalk sidewalk chalk dustless chalk
rubber is harder than chalk !
Centimetres or millimetres would be used to measure the length and width (diametre) of a piece of chalk as used by a teacher in the school classroom. When I went to school in Liverpool, England - too many years to admit, it was inches and halves, eighth and sixteenth of an inch! Nowadays, it would be the interactive whiteboard and digital displays (we just had white chalk on a blackboard). But, the metric centimetres and millimetres would still be used nowadays.
There are a couple of things that make chalk hard. The calcium in chalk is said to make chalk hard.
A collective noun for chalk is a box of chalk.
it would be either 905 mm or 9.5 cm * * * * * I am no expert on chalks but I would be greatly surprised if any piece of chalk was 905 mm (nearly 36 inches) long.
Nature's chalk is limestone--hard. Blackboard chalk is soft--gypsum.
your an idiot, no a whitle chalk is not longer than aq blue chalk
chalk comes from chalk deposits the white cliffs of dover is one then the grind it into powder then they press it into molds of chalk then they sell it