Unit of Thickness
1 mil is 1/1000 of an inch (commonly used for thickness of plastic sheets and bags)
Money
* The similarly spelled unit a "mill"
1 mill is 1/10 of 1 cent. (1/1000 of a dollar) - At one time it was common to have tax tokens in mills.
Mil etter mil was created in 1978.
6 mil is thicker than 4 mil.
1000 is mil and there are 2 so dos mil and 1 is uno dos mil uno
From Forbes, for 2007: Robert A Niblock's CompensationVs. Retailing Medians Salary $0.85 mil $1.02 mil Bonus $2.55 mil $1.24 mil Other $0.35 mil $0.73 mil Stock Gains $1.74 mil $0.00 mil Total Compensation $5.50 mil $4.25 mil
5 mil
1.7 mil
29 mil.
7 mil is thicker than 5 mil. The "mil" measurement refers to a thousandth of an inch, so 7 mil is 0.007 inches thick, while 5 mil is 0.005 inches thick. Therefore, 7 mil has a greater thickness compared to 5 mil.
No, 1.6 mil is not thicker than 1.7 mil. In fact, 1.7 mil is thicker than 1.6 mil by 0.1 mil. The term "mil" refers to a thousandth of an inch, so a higher number indicates greater thickness.
175 mil is thicker than 130 mil. In terms of measurement, "mil" refers to one-thousandth of an inch, so 175 mil is equivalent to 0.175 inches, while 130 mil is equivalent to 0.130 inches. Therefore, 175 mil has a greater thickness than 130 mil.
cuatrocientos mil
Mil is not a currency. Mil is the Portuguese word for "thousand".