The datum supporting my argument comes from my experiment outlined in my report.
Datum is latin for "That which is a given, that which is taken for granted." Its plural is the more common "Data."
data
Data
A Datum
1. Question is really vague, it is important to mark out the selected datum, as you just selected that datum? What else are you going to do with It? If you are working from another datum point just ensure that it is a good datum with critical measurements checked otherwise the new datum could throw out al measurements. P.s i wish the selected retards would stop answering with nonsense answers.
Datum is not the plural of data. Datum is singular, and its plural form is data.
1. Question is really vague, it is important to mark out the selected datum, as you just selected that datum? What else are you going to do with It? If you are working from another datum point just ensure that it is a good datum with critical measurements checked otherwise the new datum could throw out al measurements. P.s i wish the selected retards would stop answering with nonsense answers.
Correction: What is hydrographic datum? not "hydrography"
datum is the plane in which we can sketch any thing thing
sorry but i don't think there is something as datum
Datum is singular. Data or datums is plural.
According to ASME Y14.5, a primary dimensioning datum requires at least 3 points of contact to establish the datum plane. Two points of contact are required for the secondary datum and 1 point of contact is required for the tertiary datum.
The datum is supported by thorough research.
Omne Datum Optimum was created in 1139.
The plural form for the singular noun datum is data.
Datum in the context of a country (Norway) normally refers to a geodetic coordinate system. In Norway, the following coordinate systems are used: WGS84 Lat/Long - worldwide datum WGS84 UTM - UTM worldwide datum. Norway occupies 5 UTM zones, from 32-36, so it is very important to specify which zone your coordinates lie. NGO1948 - a Norwegian-only topographic datum divided into 8 zones, similar to UTM. EUREF89 - a European specific datum recommended for all European countries, and currently the official datum of Norway. Reference: http://books.google.com/books?id=1ou5Ze5A7ZYC&lpg=PT58&ots=HJAouXmvsq&dq=norway%20GIS%20datum&pg=PT58#v=onepage&q&f=false