The answer depends on whether you want to measure the mass or the height of a stack of the books. Furthermore, maths textbooks come in all shapes and sizes.
It is equal to 11.023 pounds approximately. Kilogram is the metric unit and pound is the imperial unit for mass. 1 Kilogram is 2.204 pounds. So we multiply kg by 2.204 to get the equivalent pounds.
It is 5 feet - whether or not in math.
No. Since 50 is greater than 5, 50 meters is greater than 5 meters. But the unit meters is a metric unit and that makes it total confusing to measure. In theory 50 meters is greater than 5, but in reality when you try to measure it using a meter stick, you will find that actually 5 meters is greater than 50 meters.
All depends on what math book you have!
1.7 meters.
Kilograms
It would be more appropriate to measure 5 math textbooks in grams or kilograms, as they are smaller and more suitable units for measuring the mass of books. Milligrams would be too small a unit for this measurement.
i think u would use grams but i maybe wrong
Measure what? Their mass, length, volume?
1.52m
The mass of a beetle in metric units is 5 metric units no joke!
5 km
Example:4 Meters squared, 5 kiloliters. Any metric length unit squared. All metric units with the suffix "liter"
The Metric League is a unit of measure equaling 5 Kilometers. It's a hella tight unit and can be very handy for marathons and road trips. The original definition was three miles, or the distance a person can walk in an hour.
Yes in the sense that they are both a unit of distance. No in the sense that a kilometre is 5/8 the length of a mile. The kilometre is a metric unit and is becoming a more widely accepted unit, as the metre is the SI unit for distance
2.48 L1 liter = 2.11 pints 1 pint = 0.47 liter
Bob had 3 crates. He had 5 calculus textbooks in each. How many calculus textbooks in all? 15 calculus textbooks.