It depends on the diameter of the straw, which varies. Multiply the diameter by 3.14 and the result by the length of the straw.
Yes. If you google cylinder you will probably see a closed top, but even though drinking cups don't have a closed top they are still cylinders. Hope this helps!! :D
In the plane it is the locus of all points equi-distant from a point in the plane. Show a very thin slice perpendicular to the axis of any right cylinder. Look end on at a straw.
the fibers of the straw might cause a binding reaction when mixed in clay ..not sure though
A short cylinder or a thin cylinder.
A standard drinking straw is a cylinder. The formula for calculating the volume of a cylinder is: Pi x r2 x length. So, a drinking straw that is 9.5 inches long with a diameter of .25 inches (1/4 inch) has a volume calculated like this:Pi (3.1416) x radius squared (.1252 = 0.015625) x length (9.5) = 0.46633125 cubic inches
Yes, straw is a cylinder-shaped object with a hollow center.
The drinking straw as we know it today was invented in 1888 by Marvin Stone.
No, not a drinking straw. As for straw as in grass, I guess someone could eat that.
The modern drinking straw was patented on 3 December 1888 by Marvin Chester Stone.
Historians have four that the earliest drinking straw was made by Sumerians for drinking beer. It was used to avoid the solid byproducts of fermentation.
It is prehistoric.
i like cheese
Penyedup
oval
the chinese invented the straw made of bamboo
A can of food or soda, flashlight battery, drinking glass, soda straw, paper roll at the center of a roll of paper towels