A ruler is an example of an instrument that can be used to measure relatively small linear distances, though it could not measure all three at once.
metric measurements
-- Measure the length of the box. -- Measure the width of the box. -- Measure the height of the box. -- Multiply (length) times (width) times (height). The product is the volume of the box.
(Length x Width x Height)= Volume
The term cubic applies to cubes, cuboids, and other parallelograms, which have 3 dimensions - length, width, and height for example. To find the volume, multiply the length times the width times the height in any consistent units. The formula is L x W x H.
Measuring length, width, height, and distance are all forms of what measurement?
You measure the height and the length and add them together. Multiply the result by the square root of the width. That number, in cubic units, is the volume.
You measure the height, width, and length.
You measure them.
Measure them.
If you have a ruler then you could measure the length width and height and then multiply them together. (LWH is the formula)
length by width by height
1. Ruler (length, height, width) 2. Meter Stick (length, height, width) 3. Protractor (angle)
a ruler or a tape measure
The formula is Length * Width * Height.
Length * Width * Height.
Height, Length, Width, Weight,
By length width and height
Length , Width and Height