8 and 1/2 by 11
Yes.
An A5 piece of paper measures 148.5 mm in width and 210 mm in height. In inches, this translates to approximately 5.83 inches wide and 8.27 inches tall. A5 is part of the A series paper sizes defined by the ISO 216 standard.
No. The square is all on one flat surface, like a piece of paper, but a cube has height off of the paper. When you set the cube down on the piece of paper, the place where it touches the paper is a square, but there's a lot more to it than that.
The answer depends on the piece of paper. You can cut it in half lengthways: it will still be a piece of paper but its width will be half as large!
A piece of paper has a length and a width. Though extremely small, the paper has a thickness, giving the paper 3D.
The height of a piece of paper folded in half once is half of its original height.
Yes.
8 by 11 In the United States a normal piece of letter size paper is 8 1/2 X 11 inches.
An A5 piece of paper measures 148.5 mm in width and 210 mm in height. In inches, this translates to approximately 5.83 inches wide and 8.27 inches tall. A5 is part of the A series paper sizes defined by the ISO 216 standard.
Depends on the height of each piece of paper.
They do not stick to their paper cases because they have a special lining on them which stops this. However, a cupcake would stick to normal paper.
No. The square is all on one flat surface, like a piece of paper, but a cube has height off of the paper. When you set the cube down on the piece of paper, the place where it touches the paper is a square, but there's a lot more to it than that.
When you pick up a piece of paper, the forces involved are gravity pulling the paper downward, your hand applying an upward force to lift the paper, and the normal force of the paper against your hand preventing it from falling through.
He was roughly five times the height of a normal human.
it makes a hollow noise when you pull on it but when it is a normal piece of paper it makes a crinkly noise
L x W x H, but for the height, you need to use micrometer caliper.
A normal piece of paper is about 0.0038 inches thick. So, if the paper were to be folded 50 times, it would become, essentially, 1,125,899,906,842,624 pieces of paper stacked upon one another. Therefore, you would multiply the above number by 0.0038 and that would be 4278419646001.97 inches or 67,525,562.594 miles of paper. So, a normal 8 1/2 by 11 piece of paper folded 50 times would be 67,525,562.594 miles, which is 141 times the distance the Moon is to the Earth.