That is the kilometer.
A millimeter is 1/1000 of a meter.
It is the scientific name for 1039. The -illion names are given to powers of 1000: subtract 1 from the power of 1000 to get the prefix. For example, a quadrillion is one thousand to the 4th power, times 1000 - or 1015.
It is called a 1000-agon.
a racagon
In the US scale, it is a billion. (1000 million = billion, 1000 billion = trillion)In the "long scale" used in European countries, it takes a million million to equal a billion, and the name for 1000 million is a milliard. Similarly, a million billion is a trillion, while 1000 billion is a billiard. (no relation to the table game.)
A meter is a measure of length. So a measure that is 1000 times larger than a metre would still be a length: it would never ever be a volume. So the question makes no sense.
A meter is a measure of length. So a measure that is 1000 times larger than a metre would still be a length: it would never ever be a volume. So the question makes no sense.
A millimeter is 1/1000 of a meter.
Kilometer (km) = A metric unit of length equal to 1,000 metersThe answerer is in the name: Kilo = As a prefix for units of measurement, one thousand times
A cubic meter is a cubic meter. It is a volume of 1 meter in length, 1 meter in width, and 1 meter in height. It is also 1000 liters. Only if you have fresh water you can say: 1 cubic meter water (or 1000 liters of water) weigh 1000 kilograms or 1 tonne. Volume measurement for wood: A cubic meter of wood is called a stère.
1 kilometer are 1,000 meters.Kilometer (km) = A metric unit of length equal to 1,000 metersThe answerer is in the name: Kilo = As a prefix for units of measurement, one thousand times
1000 liters is the same as one cubic meter.
Yes !! . There are 1000 meters in a kilometer. It takes a 1000 meters to equal 1 kilometer.
The meaning is in the name: Kilo (1000) meter. A kilometer is 1000 meters, or about 6/10 of a mile.
1 meter is equal to 1000 millimeters. It's all in the name. 'Milli' denotes 1/1000. Hence 1 millimeter is 1/1000th of a meter.
Joule
length of a classroom white board