Gas is 3.75 a gallon.
Speed limits are 65 miles per hour.
Artichokes are 3 for a dollar.
These are all unit rates.
It is 'real' in the world of Harry Potter, yes. Snape invented it and wrote it in his old potions textbook, where Harry learned it, and used it on Draco.
The metric unit used is feet and inches. centimeter can also be used
A unit of money with "toy" in front of it typically refers to a type of currency used in a play or toy context, such as "toy dollar" or "toy money." These are often used in educational settings or games to help children learn about money handling and basic financial concepts. They are not real currency and are primarily intended for play and learning purposes.
In American English, a collective noun used as a unit takes _____ verbs and pronouns.
In American English, a collective noun used as a unit takes _____ verbs and pronouns.
A unit rate used to compare prices is called a [UNIT PRICE]
unit price
Amperage is used to rate cartridge fuses.
Eight (8) is a number and nothing more. It may become a unit rate depending on the context in which it is used.
Speed of walking or driving would be measured in kilometres per hour.Supermarkets price tags for groceries give unit rates so that customers can compare the price of similar goods fro different manufacturers, or in different sized packages.
No. It is a unit of power. (That's the rate at which energy is moved or used.)
Real
The measurement unit used to indicate the rate at which energy is stored and returned by a capacitor is capacitance, measured in farads (F).
The lumen is the unit used to measure the rate at which light energy is radiated from a source. The lumen represents the international standard unit of luminous flux that is based on the candela.
Beats per minute
a thurmoustat
The unit of rate of change is whatever it is that is changing, divided by time units. For example, if you measure rate of change of dollars in your bank account, you would have something like dollars / month; for acceleration, the unit commonly used is (meters / second) / second, etc.