This problem does not have an answer. This is because a kilometer is a unit of distance and an hour is a unit of time. You might mean "How many hours does it take to walk 5 km?" , however that is just a guess of what you may mean, but from your question I can only say that it does not have an answer/solution.
It means that driving at any speed faster than 60 kilometers per hour is prohibited by law. 60 kilometers per hour is the same as 37.3 miles per hour.
Kilometer is distance, not speed. You must mean kilometers per hour? 1 mph = 1.60934 km/hr 1900 mph = 1900 x 1.60934 = 3058 km/hr
It means a thousand and so a thousand meters = 1 kilometer
kilometer i think
Possible you have tapeworms.
by measure distance/time like kilometer/second if i want to go from point 1 to point 2 fare from point 1 by 30 kilometer in one hour that is mean ( my velocity is 30 kilometer/second )
That is a normal crawling speed, equal to about 1 foot per second. Our average walking speed is 3 to 4 mi/hr (about 4.8 to 6.4 kph).
This problem does not have an answer. This is because a kilometer is a unit of distance and an hour is a unit of time. You might mean "How many hours does it take to walk 5 km?" , however that is just a guess of what you may mean, but from your question I can only say that it does not have an answer/solution.
I only know of it being , per second . Like KPH of KM per h , is Kilometer per hour . KPM or KM per S , Kilometer per second .
1 Kilometer per Hour = 0.621371192237334 Miles per Hour 235 Kilometers per Hour = 146.02223017577347 Miles per Hour
One kilometer is equal to .621371192 miles. Multiplied by 100, that would mean that 100 km per hour is equal to approximately 62 miles an hour.
It means that driving at any speed faster than 60 kilometers per hour is prohibited by law. 60 kilometers per hour is the same as 37.3 miles per hour.
nothing, it's just crawling on you.But if you alarm it it can hurt you but not if it's a spider that can't hurt you.
A 'click' is a kilometer, approximately 6/10 of a mile. The terms are used interchangably in the military in person or by radio. On documents, the formal 'kilometer' is usually used.
Kilometer
it means he couldn't find anybody better so he's crawling back to the person he thinks will take him back