A deca~ in the metric system is ten times larger than a centi~.
So a decametre = 10 centimetres.
A square decametre will therefore be 10 x 10 times larger than a square centimetre - 100 times its size.
There are 100 square centimeters in one square decimeter
1 inch is greater/bigger/larger/longer than 1 centimeter1 centimeter = 0.393700787 inches1 inch = 2.54 centimeters
1 meter = 100 centimeters1 cubic meter = 1,000,000 cubic centimetersThe difference in numbers between 1,000,000 and 100 is 999,900 .
ten millimeters are in a centimeter.
imagine this this is 1 millimeters = | this how much 1 centimeter is = that's the difference between them. there are 10 milimeters in 1 centimeter. or 1 milimeter is equal to 1/10 of a centimeter.
20 centimeters
It is 0.001 times greater, or rather 10,000 times smaller
The conversion between dam and cm are given .On finding the relation we get as follows 1 dam =1000 cm . On seeing this relation we can say that decametes is greater than centimeters.
10000 times larger
None. That is a 2 dimentional measurement.Assuming you mean a cubic centimeter, then 1 mL, or 0.001 liters.
Seeing that 1 centimeter equates to 6.2137119E-6 miles, then 1 mile equates to 16,0934.4 cm. A mile is much greater!
65 square meters times 0.01 meters (one centimeter) equals 0.65 cubic meters.
990
An inch is much larger. There are about 2.5 cm in one inch.
1000
Metrics goes by factors of ten. My science teacher has this acronym: Kids Have Dropped Mostly Dead Converting Metrics (Kilometer, Hectometer, Decameter, Meter, Decimeter, Centimeter, Millimeter) There are 1,000 meters in a kilometer, 100 meters in a hectometer, 10 meters in a decameter, meter, 10 decimeters in a meter, 10 centimeters in a decimeter, 100 centimeters in a meter, 10 millimeters in a centimeter, and 1,000 millimeters in a meter.So, multiply 83 millimeters by 1,000 to get 83,000
The question is a noteworthy model of efficiency. In a mere 11 words, it manages almost a half-dozen inconsistencies, contradictions, and logical impossibilities. It has no answer. -- 'centimeter' is a unit of length -- 'centimeter' can't be used to describe a volume -- volume is described in 'cubic' units -- area is described in 'square' units -- there is no such unit as a 'cubic square'
You cannot weigh an area. Just as you cannot weigh a distance. (How much does one centimeter weigh?)