Depends on the length of the ruler A 6 inch ruler would show 6 whole inches A 12 inch ruler would show 12 whole inches.
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A ruler is usually divided by: inches, centimeters, and millimeters.
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An inch is bigger than a centimeter. The size of the rule depends on how many inches or centimeters you want it to be. One inch is equal to 2.54 centimeters. To convert inches into centimeters, divide the inches by 2.54.
That's like asking "How many inches is there between the marks on a ruler ?" That depends on the ruler. It may be marked in 32nds of an inch, 16ths of an inch, 8ths of an inch, 4ths of an inch, half-inches, or whole inches. There is no standard set of 'lines' of latitude or longitude. Some maps or globes have a line printed every 30 degrees, some every 15 degrees, some every 10 degrees, and some have no lines at all. The mapping software I use can print a line every 0.033 minute if I need it, but that would be 324,000 lines of latitude between the north and south poles, and I wouldn't be able to see the places under the lines. There are 360 degrees of longitude around the whole Earth, and 180 degrees of latitude between the poles. You're welcome to draw as few or as many lines as you're comfortable with. There are 60 minutes in each degree.
A standard metric ruler is just slightly longer than 30 centimetres and slightly longer than 12 inches.The "slightly longer" is for the extra bits of ruler that stick out in front of the 0 (zero) cm/in at the beginning of the ruler and behind the 30 cm/12 in mark at the end of the ruler
Depends on the length of the ruler A 6 inch ruler would show 6 whole inches A 12 inch ruler would show 12 whole inches.
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30.48 cm
A ruler is usually divided by: inches, centimeters, and millimeters.
In many cases it indicates how many miles in one inch.
one in every 3 lines is 1/3 of the 3 lines
It depends on the line spacing used in the document. For standard single-spaced lines, there are typically around 10 to 12 lines per vertical inch. For double-spaced lines, there are usually around 5 to 6 lines per vertical inch.
I thing 5.
4 inches are 10.16 centimeters.
1, 8, 10, 16 and 32 are common numbers. 1 may be found in a yard-stick. 8 or 10 in an ordinary ruler. 16 and 32 in precision rulers.