Yes the thickness of something is just a distance.
a ruler measures the distance and a protractor measures the angles
Some are designed to measure 1/32 inch but that is not easy.
yes a metric ruler and a meter ruler is the same
On a ruler, 4.5 mm is slightly less than half a centimeter. It is located just past the 4 mm mark and before the 5 mm mark. The distance is roughly the thickness of a credit card or a thin hair. If using a metric ruler, it will be clearly marked, usually with a shorter line than the 5 mm mark.
None. A metric ruler would not show inches, as these are not a metric measurements. It would show millimetres and centimetres.
The side of a ruler that measures metric units is usually the side with centimeters and millimeters marked on it. The metric side of the ruler is typically marked with increments in centimeters and millimeters for measuring lengths in the metric system.
That depends on whether the ruler is a metric one or one that measures inches.
A metric ruler typically measures length in millimeters or centimeters and follows the metric system, whereas a US ruler measures in inches and fractions of an inch following the imperial system. Metric rulers are commonly used in countries that follow the metric system, while US rulers are popular in the United States and other countries that use the imperial system.
a ruler measures the distance and a protractor measures the angles
ruler
It is 1 millimetre.
It is 1 millimetre.
0.03125 = 1/32 inches.
0.03125 = 1/32 inches.
Measuring distance, and drawing straight lines :)
A metric ruler.
There's the meter stick which measures in metric rather than standard (imperial).