A half inch thick tempered glass will weigh 6.75 lb/ft2. With that much thickness, it can support much of the weight of possibly a small child or small animal.
Depends, what is in the needle, and we're are you putting it?
Two quarters of an inch are in a half inch.
1/2" Or Half Inch of 50% of 1 inch
there are 1\24 of a foot in a half an inchthere are 1\2 of an inch in a half an inch
A half inch thick tempered glass will weigh 6.75 lb/ft2. With that much thickness, it can support much of the weight of possibly a small child or small animal.
Daisy chains are fairly easy to make. Pick daisies with the longest stalk possible. Using a fingernail, poke a small hole in the stalk end of the daisy, about half an inch from the end. This makes a hole like a sewing needle. Use another daisy to 'thread' the 'sewing needle'. Repeat this process on the 'thread' daisy and keep repeating until a long chain is formed. To link the chain, tie the lead daisy head and the last green stalk together.
It could be as big as you want it to be, but it is usually about a half and inch wide all the way around. The standard seam allowance is 5/8 inch.
Sewing margin or seam is the length between the edge of the fabric and where the seam appears. It can be as small as 1/8th of an inch or as large or larger then an inch.
Depends, what is in the needle, and we're are you putting it?
i raised a painted lady butterfly in grade 3 and they are like a inch or half a inch
Half of an inch is about as long as a centimeter, ten times longer than a millimeter.
Gentamycin give IM.....No less than one inch needle and no more than one and one-half.....20-22 guage needle.....Most commonly use needle is one and one-fourth inches long....20-22 guage.
half inch
Two quarters of an inch are in a half inch.
A half-inch sheet of drywall typically weighs around 2.75 to 3 pounds per square foot. So the weight of a half-inch sheet of drywall will depend on its size.
A near-spherical meatball two inches in diameter should weigh slightly under two and one-half ounces (70 grams).