In the US I would say a 5 or a 6. That was what I was when I weighed that amount (I'm 5'3). Keep in mind though that every different clothing brand cuts their clothes a little differently but in most cases I would go with a 5 or a 6.
113 lbs and 5' 4". Size 0, or 00. In junior sizes, between XS-S (maybe medium if it's cut really small) or size 0,1, maybe 3. At 5' 4" look for pant inseams which are labeled "short" because unless you have extremely long legs, your inseam will probably fall between 28-30 inches. To measure your inseam, take a tape measure and measure from your crotch to the ground (or where ever you want your pants to stop) along your inner leg.
No. He died after 15 days trapped by a 27 pound rock on his foot.
6 x 150 pounds. 900 pounds of force would have to be applied.
There are 12 inches in a foot. So it would be 3/12. That can be simplified to 1/4 of a foot.
The type of transportation they would have in 1811 would be horse, and by foot.
For Fun They Would Foot Race
The basic units are foot, pound and second.The basic units are foot, pound and second.The basic units are foot, pound and second.The basic units are foot, pound and second.
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If you are trying to find pound per square inch cubed, you would just divide the pound per foot cubed by 12x12x12 (1,728). One foot cubed is equal to a block of cubed inches 12x12x12, correct? Then you just add on the "pound per" measurement and you have your answer.
One foot-pound of force equates to about 1.355818 joules.
It would depend on the size of the feet. Generally it would take less adult feet to make a pound than it would choldren's feet. It would depend on the size of the feet. Generally it would take less adult feet to make a pound than it would choldren's feet.
A foot-pound is not a pound per foot, it is a pound times a foot. So the units are not the same. The question has no answer. It is like asking how to convert feet to pounds or seconds to inches.
The American unit for work is foot-pound. It is a measurement of energy where one foot-pound is the amount of energy used to move a one-pound object a distance of one foot.
the foot-poundforce
foot/second.square
One foot-pound = 1.3558 Newton-meters.
I personally would say hello. What a person looks like is of no concern. You are what you are.
foot pound second brick