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No, it does not. It the quantity being measured is less than it was in the base period, ten the index will be less than 100.No, it does not. It the quantity being measured is less than it was in the base period, ten the index will be less than 100.No, it does not. It the quantity being measured is less than it was in the base period, ten the index will be less than 100.No, it does not. It the quantity being measured is less than it was in the base period, ten the index will be less than 100.
The answer will depend on what quantity is being measured by c.
accurate values of the quantity that you wanna measure using certain properties of it.
Yes, because it describes the quantity of something being measured.
You simply can't convert between meters and square meters. Think of a (linear) meter as being infinitely thin.
No, it does not. It the quantity being measured is less than it was in the base period, ten the index will be less than 100.No, it does not. It the quantity being measured is less than it was in the base period, ten the index will be less than 100.No, it does not. It the quantity being measured is less than it was in the base period, ten the index will be less than 100.No, it does not. It the quantity being measured is less than it was in the base period, ten the index will be less than 100.
mass
mass
The answer will depend on what quantity is being measured by c.
It seems so. The English Wiktionary lists the following definition: measurand: 1. A quantity intended to be measured. 2. (engineering) An object being measured.
accurate values of the quantity that you wanna measure using certain properties of it.
Yes, because it describes the quantity of something being measured.
Pressure is a force measured in amounts. Quantity is about amounts of something. Therefore they are similar by virtue of being about a `number of things'.
An instrument in which the present value of the quantity being measured is indicated is called an indicating instrument.
The answer will depend on what quantity is being measured. Since that has not been specified, there can be no sensible answer.
False
You simply can't convert between meters and square meters. Think of a (linear) meter as being infinitely thin.