There is no weight ratio for height. The weight of an object depends on its the volume and density. The volume depends on the height as well as the average cross section so height, alone, cannot determine weight.
BMI: 24.6257988. If you do not round to 25 then you are in the normal range but barely.BMI = (mass(lb) * 703)/ (height(in))^2BMIAbbreviation:Body mass index.bod·y mass in·dexNoun:A weight-to-height ratio, calculated: dividing one's weight in kilograms by the square of one's height in meters
base by height
The ratio of height to length in some stairs is 1:2.
It is pounds. An inch is the measuring unit for height. A pound is the measuring unit for weight. The logic is as follows. height, weight -> (measuring unit for height), (measuring unit for weight) Some similar examples, If it were "height, distance and inches." the missing word would be "miles" If it were "height, age and inches." the missing word would be "years"
The ratio of 115 to 30 is ( 23/6 ).
You could use a BMI calculator which gives you a ratio. The ratio is your weight in relation to your height. You can use this ratio as your percentage to measure how far you are from your ideal weight.
Usually the larger the dog, the more weight they have, though all breeds are different. Summary: There is no true weight, height ratio.
a good diet
a good diet
a thing does not get a term obese by their weight its considered to be a specific ratio between weight and height.
People who stay close to the ideal height/weight ratio have a better chance of remaining healthy into Old age. They don't get diabetic, they avoid heart disease, their knees and hips last longer.
RATIO
Body Mass Index (BMI)
The ratio of the height of an object to the length of its base.
You are at a healthy weight for your height, 5'4". Your body mass index (ratio of height to weight in terms of body fat) is 19, which means you are at the lower range for normal weight.
BMI (Body Mass Index) is the ratio between height and weight-- the asker has already entered the relevant height and weight. Regardless of what height was plugged into the equation, a BMI of 24 is definitely within the normal range.
There is no single ratio. The Body Mass Index has been discredited and is not generally used because muscle is denser than fatty tissue. However, that index was based on the ratio of mass to the squared height - not the height. A height:weight ratio is likely to be useless.