A small ruler is normally 150 mm. Many engineers use these.
On a standard metric ruler, 8 mm is located between the 7 mm and 9 mm marks. Rulers typically have millimeter markings, where each small division represents 1 mm. To find 8 mm, count eight small lines starting from the 0 mm mark. If your ruler also has centimeters, 8 mm is equivalent to 0.8 cm.
a ruler measures 15 cm .1 cm =10 mm .THis means , 1 standard ruler measures 150 mm.
To determine how many 5 mm queen termites can fit on a 50 cm ruler, first convert 50 cm to mm, which equals 500 mm. Then, divide the total length of the ruler by the length of one termite: 500 mm ÷ 5 mm = 100. Therefore, 100 queen termites can fit on a 50 cm ruler.
30 cm or 300 mm onstandard metric school ruler
3 mm on a ruler is a small measurement, equivalent to 0.3 centimeters. Most standard rulers feature millimeter markings, allowing you to locate 3 mm easily, which is just three small lines past the 0 cm mark. It is often used for precise measurements in crafts, engineering, or science.
94 mm on a ruler is between 90 mm and 95 mm. On a typical ruler containing both mm and inches scales, where the scales are reversed with respect to each other, 94 mm is opposite 8 5/16 inches.
To measure the mm of an item you would need to use a metric ruler. The metric ruler has cm and mm on it.
On a standard ruler, 9 mm would be represented by a line that is approximately the width of a standard pencil lead. Each millimeter on a ruler is typically divided into smaller increments, such as tenths or half millimeters, depending on the ruler's scale. So, 9 mm would be slightly less than a centimeter, about a third of an inch.
It is 5 mm. A ruler is used for the purpose of determining sizes from 1 mm to approx 300 mm,=.
10. This is very clear on any standard ruler
20 mm should still be 20 mm!
A small sherry glass would be approx 55 mm tall.