answersLogoWhite

0


Best Answer

500 inches is greater than 40 feet which equals 480 inches

User Avatar

Wiki User

8y ago
This answer is:
User Avatar
More answers
User Avatar

Kaiden Joslin

Lvl 2
2y ago

You did not explain that many details. Proof?????

This answer is:
User Avatar

Add your answer:

Earn +20 pts
Q: Is 500 inches greater than less than or equal to 40 ft?
Write your answer...
Submit
Still have questions?
magnify glass
imp
Related questions

Is 18 inches 'greater than or equal to' or 'less than' 2feet?

Less than.


Is A inches greater than or less than 2 feet?

1 ft = 12 in → 2 ft = 24 in → if A is less than 24 then A inches is less than 2 feet → if A is equal to 24 then A inches is equal to 2 feet → if A is greater than 24 then A inches is greater than 2 feet


Is 16 feet greater than less than or equal to 100 inches?

Greater than


Is 145 inches greater than less than or equal to 4 yards?

Less


Is 6 feet greater than less than or equal 72 inches?

equal


Is 5 yards greater than less than or equal to 140 inches?

Greater because 5 yards = 180 inches


Is 1 foot greater than less than or equal to 10 inches?

1 foot=12 inches so greater


Is 1 yd and 9inches Greater than less than or equal to inches?

1 yard and 9 inches is equal to 45 inches.


Is 60 inches greater than less than or equal to 5 ft 7 in?

It's less than... 5'7" is 67 inches.


Is 2.5 ft less than greater than or equal to 32 inches?

There are 12 inches in a foot. 2.5 feet is 12 plus 12 plus 6 which is 30 inches, so . . . 2.5 feet is not greater than or equal to 32 inches. It is less than 32 inches


Is 100 inches less than greater than or equal to 3 yards and 1 foot?

less than


What is the comparison operator used for not equal to in Excel?

You can use the Not function or the <> operator, which is the < and the > beside each other. To see if the values in A1 and A2 are not equal to each other, you can type: =A1<>A2 or =Not(A1=A2) In each case they will either give you TRUE if they are not equal or FALSE if they are equal, in the cell that you enter the formula into.