There are a number of rules for handling the flag including not hanging it out in bad weather, not leaving it out in the dark without proper lighting, not wearing it as clothing, not draping it over your car, not using it in advertising, etc. A complete list can be found at http://www.ushistory.org/betsy/flagetiq.html
1> the 50 stars stand for the fifty staes and u can do the rest
The rules for battlefield 3 end game are no rules, the is air supperoirty and plain capture the flag]
This will all depend on which flag is flying alongside or below the American flag. If being flown with flags of other nations, they should all be raised to the same height and are never to be flown on the same pole. If being flown with a state, city or organizational flag, the US flag will fly above the other flag in a larger size. On most standard sized flagpoles, the American flag will be a 3'x5' flag and the other flag will be a 2'x3' flag. If the US flag is flying along a different flag on separate flagpoles, the flags can be of equal height but the US flag will then need to fly on the extreme left of the other flags. This left side is known to be a prominent flag. When flown with flagpoles displaying non-national flags, the American flag will be raised first and lowered last. There is a link below.
The American flag is called the Grand OldFlag.
The proportion of the height to the length of the American flag is 2:3. This means that for every 2 units of height, the flag has 3 units of length. This ratio is standardized for the official flag dimensions used by the U.S. government.
No. Buzz Aldrin, one of the 3 astronauts of the Apollo 11, said that the American flag felt on the moon's surface when the Lunar Module took of again into space to return to the earth. It felt because of the engines of the Lunar Module, witch where making the flag flying. At the end , the flag felt over on the ground because of the forces of the engines.
The British flag and the American flag (as well as the French and the Russian flags) all use the same 3 colors, red, white, and blue. But the patterns are different.
The answer is in your question!
3 feet long
It took Betsy Ross 3 months to sew the first American flag.
3
It became a state on 3 December 1818.