What do you mean by "exact measurement"? Do you wish to determine the cylinder's height? Its diameter? Its surface area? Its volume?
Is as exact as possible
line measurement- distance between two lines end measurement- distance between two faces
This question makes no sense. An absolute measurement cannot approach anything as it is just one measurement that measures the exact thing that it is measuring.
1974
41.3 is an exact measurement.
You know the exact measurement of something, wether it is Cenemiters or Inches... You can draw a straight line with the ruler as your guide line... And it's a GREAT object to smack people with!!!
What do you mean by "exact measurement"? Do you wish to determine the cylinder's height? Its diameter? Its surface area? Its volume?
Tad is not an exact measurement. It means a little.
To read the correct measurement from a measuring apparatus, ensure that your eye is at the same level as the measuring line on the apparatus. Read the measurement at the bottom of the meniscus for liquids in a graduated cylinder, or at the exact point where the measurement aligns with the scale for other types of measuring tools like rulers or tape measures. Record the measurement with the appropriate units.
Is as exact as possible
the measurement is not always exact and say you were to measure a football field and your measurement were to be exact it would be close to impossible
the longitide line that has the measurement 0degrees is called equator
if your asking measurement the court is around 10meters wide and around 20 metres in length this is not an exact measurement but it is approximate
The negative prefixes that can be used with the word "exact" are "in" and "inexact." For example, "inexact measurement" means a measurement that is not completely accurate.
There is no 'exact'. Oceans, by their very nature, are constantly shifting and changing.
No. D=m/v and no measurement is exact due to uncertainty.