Between one and 2 inches. If your ruler is spaced in 10ths, it would be the 6th marking between the two(one past half) if it's spaced in 8ths, it would be around the 5th marking. If it's spaced in 16ths, it would be halfway between the 9th and 10th.
Your standard aluminum soda can is 4-13/16 inches.
On a standard ruler, 1.44 inches would fall between the 1 3/8 inch mark and the 1 1/2 inch mark. Each inch on a ruler is divided into 16 equal parts, so 1.44 inches would be closer to 1 7/16 inches. To locate this measurement precisely, you would need to count 9 of the 1/16 inch markings from the 1 3/8 inch mark.
On a ruler, 2.95 inches would be located between the 2-inch mark and the 3-inch mark. This measurement is typically represented by smaller incremental markings between the whole numbers on the ruler. Each inch on a standard ruler is divided into 16 equal parts, so 2.95 inches would fall 15 parts past the 2-inch mark.
Just a "smidge" under 3 11/16 inches. That's as close as you're going to get it on a ruler based on 1/16th inch increments. (From a graphic artist who has struggled with this one forever.)
It is 2/10 past the one inch mark on a ruler.
the 9th mark on a ruler in inches is 9/16 inches for centimeters its 9/10 cm.
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.79 inches on a ruler is just shy of 0.8 inches, which is just under the 13/16 inch mark. On a standard ruler, you can find .79 inches by measuring slightly before the 13/16 inch line. It's approximately three-quarters of an inch, making it just a little less than 8 tenths of an inch.
My ruler is not that accurate, but it looks like 15/16 to me.
Your standard aluminum soda can is 4-13/16 inches.
On a standard ruler, 1.44 inches would fall between the 1 3/8 inch mark and the 1 1/2 inch mark. Each inch on a ruler is divided into 16 equal parts, so 1.44 inches would be closer to 1 7/16 inches. To locate this measurement precisely, you would need to count 9 of the 1/16 inch markings from the 1 3/8 inch mark.
It is 3/10 of an inch before 2 inches on the ruler
Where is 0.71 inches on the ruler
On a standard ruler, 14 inches is located two inches beyond the 12-inch mark, which is typically where the ruler ends for a foot. It can be visualized as slightly longer than the full length of a standard ruler, extending into the next segment. If using a yardstick, it would be just two inches from the 16-inch mark.
On a standard ruler, 2.39 inches would fall between the 2-inch mark and the 3-inch mark. Each inch on a ruler is typically divided into 16 equal parts, known as sixteenths. So, 2.39 inches would be just past the 2 3/8 inch mark and slightly before the 2 7/16 inch mark on the ruler.
Oh, dude, 1.43 inches on a ruler is like... 1 and 7/16 inches. It's just a smidge over 1.25 inches, but like, who really measures things that precisely anyway? Just eyeball it and call it a day.
It's between 9/16 and 5/8