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They can be meaningful but usually to only a limited audience.If I described someone as being as tall as me, my friends and colleagues would have a pretty good idea. But no one else would have much of a clue.Newspapers often use non-standard units that its readers may be familiar with. For example: (UK perspective) volumes that would fill Olympic swimming pools, high as a stack of double decker buses, areas as big as Wales. I suppose an Olympic pool is a standard, but that should not detract from the point that I am trying to make.They can be meaningful but usually to only a limited audience.If I described someone as being as tall as me, my friends and colleagues would have a pretty good idea. But no one else would have much of a clue.Newspapers often use non-standard units that its readers may be familiar with. For example: (UK perspective) volumes that would fill Olympic swimming pools, high as a stack of double decker buses, areas as big as Wales. I suppose an Olympic pool is a standard, but that should not detract from the point that I am trying to make.They can be meaningful but usually to only a limited audience.If I described someone as being as tall as me, my friends and colleagues would have a pretty good idea. But no one else would have much of a clue.Newspapers often use non-standard units that its readers may be familiar with. For example: (UK perspective) volumes that would fill Olympic swimming pools, high as a stack of double decker buses, areas as big as Wales. I suppose an Olympic pool is a standard, but that should not detract from the point that I am trying to make.They can be meaningful but usually to only a limited audience.If I described someone as being as tall as me, my friends and colleagues would have a pretty good idea. But no one else would have much of a clue.Newspapers often use non-standard units that its readers may be familiar with. For example: (UK perspective) volumes that would fill Olympic swimming pools, high as a stack of double decker buses, areas as big as Wales. I suppose an Olympic pool is a standard, but that should not detract from the point that I am trying to make.
Swimming pools must have a certain amount of chlorine content. The United States standard for safe levels of chlorine in swimming pools is at least 1 part per million and no greater than 3 parts per million c is greater than or equal to 1. c is less than or equal to 3
100,000 cubic miles is a measure of volume equivalent to approximately 416.2 billion cubic kilometers. To put it in perspective, this volume is roughly equal to the total volume of water in 100 million Olympic-sized swimming pools. It's a substantial amount of space, highlighting the vastness of large-scale measurements.
It is required to use only the special drinking fountains, lunch counters, schools, and swimming pools that have been provided and are clearly marked for its use.