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Mass can be measured in -- kilogram, and any of its multiples and sub-multiples -- pound-mass -- slug
The metric system is not based on the multiples of 100. It is based on the multiples of ten.
Angiosperms with petals in multiples of four belong to the subclass Magnoliidae. This group includes plants like magnolias, water lilies, and star anise which typically have flower parts in multiples of four.
The multiples of a meter are obtained by multiplying the meter by whole numbers. For example, the first few multiples of a meter are 1 meter, 2 meters, 3 meters, 4 meters, and so on.
True Lilies are monocotyledonous, so the answer is three or multiples of three
gram is multiple and milligram is sub multiple of kilogram
Multiple and sub-multiples are used when the range of values is too large to be measured in a single unit.
· The multiples and sub multiples of mass are the Petagram, teragram, gigagram, megagram, kilogram, gram, milligram, microgram.AnswerAs the SI base unit for mass is the kilogram, the gram is the submultiple -not the other way around!
"one millionth of ..."
They are related as they are parts of the same measurement unit: They are either whole kilograms or fractions of a kilogram, or both, as in 12kg 23gm.
They are all multiples.
That probably refers to the SI prefixes, such as kilo (meaning 1000), mega (meaning a million), milli (meaning 1/1000), etc.
They are all the multiples of 16.They are all the multiples of 16.They are all the multiples of 16.They are all the multiples of 16.
Not all multiples of 40 are multiples of 80. Only the even multiples of 40 are also multiples of 80. The odd multiples, e.g. 40, 120, 200, 280, and 360, are not multiples of 80.
All multiples of 8 are also multiples of 2, but not all multiples of 2 are multiples of 8.
Multiples of what???For example, to get multiples of 20, just start with 20 and add 20 at a time: 20, 40, 60, ...
There are uncountably many of them, because the prefixes can go on for ever.