The inch sign is two prime symbols (″), while the foot sign is one (′). In ordinary typing, single and double quotation marks or apostrophes may be substituted.
inches for length measurement, and seconds for angular measurement
Two feet is less than two yards. There are 12 inches in one foot. There are 3 feet in one yard. Two yards would be 6 feet.
Assuming that equiveient is meant to be equivalent, the answer is that there is no such number. 24 ft is a measure of length and no number, by itself, has a length. So equivalence is not possible.
Hi Dear '12 inches =1 feet, 24 inches =2 feet,36 inches =3 feet and so on like that.
There are 0.0254 metres in one inch. Therefore, rounded to two decimal places, 1.79 metres is equal to 1.79/0.0254 = 70.47 inches.
The symbol for feet is one apostrophe, as in 15 feet = 15' The symbol for inches is two apostrophes, as in 15 inches = 15"
The short form of six feet five inches is 6'5". You will always use one apostrophe after the number of feet, and two after the number of inches.
there is nooo such thing
"Feet" has no apostrophes.
The apostrophe in a contraction holds the place of one or more letters omitted from the conjoining of two words.
2 apostrophes mean inches, and one means feet. 6'5" means six feet and 5 inches
The two types of apostrophes are the straight apostrophe ('), which is used to show possession or contraction, and the curly or typographic apostrophe (’), which is a more visually appealing version of the straight apostrophe.
A contraction is made of two words with an apostrophe. Note the apostrophe replaces a letter.
The apostrophe in 7' means 7 inches. This means that there would be two 7 inch sides to the rectangle and two 8 inch sides. Perimeter = 7+7+8+8= 30 inches.
No apostrophe needed in the sentence "The turkey has two ears."
Yes, it two years' experience Whenever you're wondering whether a phrase like this needs an apostrophe, try mentally substituting "one" for "two" (or whatever other number is in the phrase you're wondering about). "Two years' experience" and "two years experience" sound the same -- but "one year's experience" and "one year experience" are easy to tell apart. And of course you'd say "one year's experience." You'd also say "one week's notice" and "one dollar's worth." Just remember, when it's a plural, put the apostrophe after the "s," where it belongs on a plural possessive.
In what context? It could be in a phrase such as 'two's company' and then there is an apostrophe because it is a contraction and short for 'two is'.