get a tape measure or a ruler and measure it
The height of a penny is the thickness: 1.55 mm (millimeters)
It is Length.
By using measuring instruments.
Measure upwards from the ground to the top of what ever it is and at the top, mark where it stops then, voiala! You have the height of the thing.
The number of $50 bills in a stack depends on the height of the stack and the thickness of each bill. A standard U.S. bill is about 0.0043 inches thick. Therefore, a stack of 50 bills would be approximately 0.215 inches tall. To find the total number of bills in a specific height stack, you can divide the height of the stack by the thickness of a single bill.
Volume= Length x Height x thickness = Mass ---------- Density So, Thickness = Mass ---------------------------------- Density x Length x Height
Length
The height of a penny is the thickness: 1.55 mm (millimeters)
Finished wall thickness X 20 = wall height
You find the displacement. -Angel Greenway.
It is Length.
By using measuring instruments.
Measure upwards from the ground to the top of what ever it is and at the top, mark where it stops then, voiala! You have the height of the thing.
The number of $50 bills in a stack depends on the height of the stack and the thickness of each bill. A standard U.S. bill is about 0.0043 inches thick. Therefore, a stack of 50 bills would be approximately 0.215 inches tall. To find the total number of bills in a specific height stack, you can divide the height of the stack by the thickness of a single bill.
A plane
It depends on the thickness and width of the footings and the thickness and height of the foundation walls.
Yes the thickness of something is just a distance.