The final height reached is indeterminate. There are too many variables involved.
6.6
It is regression. Galton coined the term in the course of his study on the heights of parents and their children. His conclusion was that tall parents tended to have tall children and short parents had short children, but that the children's height regressed towards the mean height for the population.
All that can be said is that, unless you have a major accident, you will be at least 5'5". The whole theory of regression was developed because Dalton observed that tall parents tended to have tall children and short parent tended to have short children but that the children's heights REGRESSED towards the overall population mean. So your parents' height is only a part of the determinant. Your gender, health, your grandparents' heights will all play a part.
You can't really predict from the heights of your parents how tall you will be, especially when their heights are very different. Most boys have gone through their last major growth spurt by the time they are 15 and most girls are pretty much done growing taller by that age, so judging from your height and age alone, I would estimate you will come in at about 6'0" if you are male or 5'9" if you are female when you are full-grown.
Just look at how tall your parents are.If one parent is short and one parent is tall,you'll most likely end up somewhere in between their heights.
6.6
This greatly depends on the parents, if they are very tall so will you be tall.
Usually the adult height of a boy is more or less equal to his parents height. If the parents are both tall then the height will be more than the parents.
Predicting exact height is difficult, but you can estimate your potential adult height using a simple calculation. For boys: (mother's height + father's height + 5) / 2. For girls: (mother's height + father's height - 5) / 2. This suggests you might be around 5'5" or 5'6" as an estimate based on your parents' heights.
It is regression. Galton coined the term in the course of his study on the heights of parents and their children. His conclusion was that tall parents tended to have tall children and short parents had short children, but that the children's height regressed towards the mean height for the population.
The foal could be any height with that range in height from the parents. A foals height will not be in the middle of the two heights generally speaking.
As Dalton's study on regression showed, parents' heights are not sufficient to predict their children's heights. In fact, the word "regression" comes from his findings that tall parents had tall children BUT that the children's heights also regressed towards the population mean.
There's really no right height for general person. If your parents are tall your most likely to be tall to but if your parents arn't very tall then you will probably be short. Its not a bad thing that you either short or tall everybody is a different height and you just have to except what your height is.
nothing in the world will shorten your height, stand tall and be proud of your height, and above all be happy with who and what you are!
The queens guards were very tall in height. Normally, they reached heights up to 6"6". Guards varied in height, but were normally tall and stronger for more authority over queen's invaders.
I would not put too much trust in what your doctor says in this instance. Your height depends on a lot more factors than just your current age and height and your parents' heights. It will depend on the heights of your grandparents and their parents and so on. The further the ancestry, the less impact their height will have, but there will be some. Your height will also depend on you health - from birth to now.
There is no way to know exactly how tall you will be. You can see how tall your parents are and gauge how tall you will be from their height.