On a standard ruler, 1.5cm would be the distance between the 1cm mark and the 2cm mark. It's a relatively small distance and can be found by eyeballing or using the measurement markings on the ruler.
It is approximately 2/5 the size of the inch mark. It contains 10 close markings (mm) and 100cm make up 1 metre. A ruler over in ireland anyway usually comes as 30cm size, with some having 15cm
To show 0.13 meters on a centimeter ruler, you would convert meters to centimeters, as there are 100 centimeters in a meter. 0.13 meters = 13 centimeters. Locate the 13 cm mark on the ruler to represent 0.13 meters.
There are 60,000 m3 in a 15cm deep plot with an area of 40 hectares.
A centimeter is equivalent to 10 millimeters on a standard ruler. It is the second smallest unit of measurement on most rulers, with millimeters being the smallest.
It depends what kind and size of the ruler. Unless it is a very big ruler it would weigh maybe, 50 to 200 g. 1000 g = 1 kg
15cm
Depending on the size of it id say either a 15cm ruler or a 30cm ruler.
Depending on the size of it id say either a 15cm ruler or a 30cm ruler.
A normal ruler from England measures 30cm and 12inches, or 15cm and 5 inches depending on how big you want it.
0.13m is equal to 13cm. So between the 12cm and the 14cm segments :)
If it measures a maximum of 30cm, which most rulers do it's 15cm.
Its as big as a 15cm ruler with maximum girth of a diameter of a mug. It can grow longer.
Depends on the length AND material of both. The generic comparison between a 15cm wooden pencil, with a 30cm plastic ruler: most likely the ruler weighs more.
Answer: 15CM Answer: They come in different sizes, actually. Sizes between 20 and 30 centimeters are fairly common.
show 1.38" on a ruler
If you look at the history of earth as a 15cm ruler dinosaurs are around 7cm and man is not even 1mm
If 15cm is the diameter then the radius is 7.5cm If the circumference is 15cm then the radius is 7.5/pi cm