Well, if it's for professional work, stick with one unit of measurement. I would use feet because that's what most people and documents and things measure and say it in. Stick with one is the best advice and try using feet for rooms.
Hope this helped!
You would use area. I would use the meter2. Okay
Oh, dude, you're hitting me with the math questions! Okay, so the area of a circle is π times the radius squared. Since the diameter is 20 meters, the radius is half of that, so 10 meters. Plug that into the formula, and you get an area of 100π square meters. So, like, grab a tape measure and start marking out that circle, or just trust me on the math, whatever floats your boat.
Oh, dude, it's like you're asking me to do math or something. Okay, so if you want to find out how many meters are in 60 square meters, you just take the square root of 60, which is about 7.75 meters. So, like, there are approximately 7.75 meters in 60 square meters.
Sure thing, honey! How about a standard school bus? Those bad boys usually measure around 10 meters in length. Just imagine cruising down the road in a big yellow beast that's longer than your average parking spot. Watch out for those tight turns!
The work okay does have a long vowel sound. The letter o and a both say their name.
Of course!
It will be ok as long as you make sure that their cage isn't in direct sunlight or near a drafty area.
Well, darling, 600 meters is a unit of length, not weight. It's like asking how many apples are in a gallon - just doesn't make sense. So, to answer your question, 600 meters is equal to 0 kilograms because they measure different things. Hope that clears things up for you, honey.
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Oh, dude, you're hitting me with the math questions now? Okay, let me break it down for you. So, a half meter is 0.5 meters, right? To make 4 and a half meters, you'd need 9 half meters. It's like basic math, man.
Okay
Okay, the characteristics of grasslands are very little to no trees, long grass, large grassy area, and has barley any rain at all.