I have the exact same indentation. I have had it all my life and it has never caused me any problems. I wouldn't worry about it.
on the front tires its a few inches behind tire wheel well , you should see a notch / indentation for your jack . Put your jack in the middle of the indentation . Same thing for the rear except its located a few inches in front of wheel well .
such a stupid question ignore that!! Well it depends on what two fingers! If it is your pinky and ring finger I would say about 2.5 inches. If it was your ring and middle then I would say three inches. If it was middle and pointer then that would probrably be 2.5 inches.
The normal length of a finger is measured in inches.
The women with the longest nails is Lee Redmond..!!
1-2 cm. depending how fat your fingers are
about an inch
You would be 10.04 fingers tall. 8 inches = 0.2032 metres, therefore 2.04 metres / 0.2032 metres = 10.04.
14 mm equals .55 inches. People with average sized hands have fingers that are around half an inch wide.
There are four main types of indentation: block indentation, hanging indentation, first line indentation, and reverse indentation. Block indentation indents the entire paragraph, while hanging indentation indents all lines except the first. First line indentation indents only the first line, and reverse indentation indents everything except the first line.
Rollie Fingers is 6 feet 4 inches tall. He weighs 190 pounds. He bats right and throws right.
I play both the bassoon and the contrabassoon and there is a noticeable difference between the reeds. My contra reed is 2 3/4 inches long and 3/4 wide at the tip compared to a normal bassoon reed which is about 2 1/4 inches long and about 9/16 wide at the tip. The most noticeable difference is when switching form contra to bassoon.
There is no required standard for the amount of indentation from a bullet, or for an indentation for the bullet itself. Using a typewriter, the typist gets to choose and will likely choose what appears best to them or, if typing someone else's work, what appears best to the person for whom the page is written.Using word processing or other automated systems, the indentation for the bullet and the indentation after the bullet is predetermined by the software. The typist has no choice to make. Example:This bullet and the spacing is determined by the software design of this answer box.This bullet has one indent inserted before the bullet, but the software is determining where those two actions will place the finished bullet and text that follows.