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M = a thousand dollars MM = a million dollars (a thousand thousands)
$3.5 MM
You would measure a nickel in a Graduated Cylinder. Coins are normally measured in grams for weight and mm for diameter and thickness. A U.S. nickel weighs 5 gm, is 21.2 mm in diameter, and is 2 mm thick.
mm is a unit of length; it doesn't make sense to convert it to dollars. Unless you have something measured by length, such as a string, which has a specific cost per meter or per mm.
Milimeters
M = a thousand dollars MM = a million dollars (a thousand thousands)
$3.5 MM
You would measure a nickel in a Graduated Cylinder. Coins are normally measured in grams for weight and mm for diameter and thickness. A U.S. nickel weighs 5 gm, is 21.2 mm in diameter, and is 2 mm thick.
mm is a unit of length; it doesn't make sense to convert it to dollars. Unless you have something measured by length, such as a string, which has a specific cost per meter or per mm.
Milimeters
$135 MM
Silver dollars issued up to 1935, and copper-nickel dollars issued from 1971 to 1978, were 38.1 mm in diameter.Current "golden" dollars (actually brass) are 26.5 mm in diameter.
11 millimeters = 0.43 inches in any terms.
It is: 700,000 dollars
No, 10 mm is not bigger than 6 mm. In terms of measurement, millimeters are a unit of length, with 10 mm being smaller than 6 mm. This is because the higher the number of millimeters, the shorter the length.
550 dollars for new one.
In terms of dollars