There are 5,280 feet in one mile.
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In French, numbers from 1000 to 1020 are as follows: 1000 - mille 1001 - mille un 1002 - mille deux 1003 - mille trois 1004 - mille quatre 1005 - mille cinq 1006 - mille six 1007 - mille sept 1008 - mille huit 1009 - mille neuf 1010 - mille dix 1011 - mille onze 1012 - mille douze 1013 - mille treize 1014 - mille quatorze 1015 - mille quinze 1016 - mille seize 1017 - mille dix-sept 1018 - mille dix-huit 1019 - mille dix-neuf 1020 - mille vingt
Mille.
Mille
473.2 ml
Cent mille.
a mille is 1 tenth of a cent so there are 10 mille in 1 cent
Mille cinquante-deux pieds.
1 MCF (mille cubic feet) = 1000 CF = 10 CCF (hundreds of cubic feet) 1 MCF = 28.317 m3
In French, numbers from 1000 to 1020 are as follows: 1000 - mille 1001 - mille un 1002 - mille deux 1003 - mille trois 1004 - mille quatre 1005 - mille cinq 1006 - mille six 1007 - mille sept 1008 - mille huit 1009 - mille neuf 1010 - mille dix 1011 - mille onze 1012 - mille douze 1013 - mille treize 1014 - mille quatorze 1015 - mille quinze 1016 - mille seize 1017 - mille dix-sept 1018 - mille dix-huit 1019 - mille dix-neuf 1020 - mille vingt
The Romans also used the word mile, derived from the latin mille passus mille passus translates as 1,000 paces, one pace being two steps. So a Roman mile is 1,000 paces or 5,000 Roman feet. The current definition of a mile as 5,280 feet
"Pede" in millepede means feet. "Mille" means 1,000. So, millepede literally means: 1,000 feet.
According to the Romans, there are one thousand paces in a mile. Mille passuum means one thousand paces.
one litre contains 1000 millileters. Hence the prefix MILLE meaning one thousanth
473.2 ml
1.6 kilometers = 1 mile
The word "mile" comes to us from the Ancient Romans who spoke Latin. The Latin word "mille" meant one thousand. An ancient Roman mile was 1,000 double paces (one step with each foot), and that's why it is "one thousand" or "mille".
Mille, one thousand