Which is bigger inches or feet
Is feet or inches bigger? What Is bigger 70 inches bigger then 5 feet? Which is bigger 5 feet or 30 inches? Which is bigger 96 inches or 9 feet?
What is bigger 2. What is bigger 75 inches or 5 feet? Which is bigger inches or 40 feet? Is 24 inches bigger than 2 feet and 3 inches? Is 9 feet bigger than 96 inches? What is bigger inches or 10 feet? What is bigger 98 in. Is 4 feet bigger than 50 inches? What is bigger 5 feet or 55 inches? Is 5 ft bigger than 55 in?
Is Which is bigger 4 feet or 32 inches? Which is bigger 58 inches are five feet? What is bigger 5. What is bigger 23 inches or 2 feet? Which is more 73 inches or 6 feet? Is 5 feet or 60 inches bigger? What is bigger 34 feet or inches? Is seventy two inches bigger or is 6 feet bigger?
What is bigger 59 inches or 5 feet? What is bigger 49 inches or 4 feet? People also asked. Carnal knowledge of child 13 to 15 years old? View results. Early farms were sold to would-be farmers as lots of acres or 1 sq mile. Interestingly enough the Geodetic coastal survey and ordnance surveys of the entire US are metric. The only other useage I have ever encountered is on railways, where the radius of curvature of a line used to be measured in chains.
Links and chains are so-called as distances were measure with real links, made of metal. In the story Kim, written by Rudyard Kipling, there are several references to links and chains: So far as Kim could gather, he was to be diligent and enter the Survey of India as a chain-man Colonel Creighton Sahib - this was unfair - sent Kim a written examination-paper that concerned itself solely with rods and chains and links and angles Since Mohammedan horse-boys and pipe-tenders are not expected to drag Survey-chains round the capital of an independent Native State, Kim was forced to pace all his distances by means of a bead rosary.
Rods, poles and perches are different names for the same unit. Medieval ploughing was done with oxen, up to 4 pairs at a time. The ploughman handled the plough. His boy controlled the oxen using a stick, which had to be long enough to reach all the oxen.
This was the rod, pole or perch. It was an obvious implement to measure the fields, such as 4 poles to the chain. A BBC webpage about allotments says that "an allotment plot is 10 poles" and claims that "A pole is measured as the length from the back of the plough to the nose of the ox". I suppose that if you wanted to control the front ox, you needed a pole long enough to reach!
The perch was used in the reign of Henry II , the pole since the 16C, and the rod since In the 16th century the lawful rod was decreed to be the combined length of the left feet of 16 men as they left church on a Sunday morning. In North Devon there is a tradition that fencing, that is to say the cutting and laying of a hedge, would be done at so much a land yard, which seemed to be about 5 paces or 5.
An earlier name for a rod was a gyrd which is the derivation of a yard. A correspondent told me: "In the early s my mother had come into possession of a small cottage in Bwlch y Cibau mid Wales. She wanted the hedge round the garden laid and made stock proof. A local man in his late 50s I think quoted her as three and six a rod.
The Ramsden's chain or engineer's chain is feet long, where each link is one foot long see below. I've had a suggestion that this chain was called after Ramsden was Jesse Ramsden , an English astronomical and scientific instrument maker. A correspondent writes: "From my own experience using this chain, it was used for geographically surveying land. On longer stretches, two people, one at each end of the chain, would 'flip flop' end for end.
One person would remain stationary while the other walked past the first until the chain reached its tether producing a count of unit measure and then usually an iron peg placed at the desired length to be marked off. These are called surveyors' stakes. Fathoms measure depth of water. They have been in use in England since before , and may be derived from faethm , the Anglo Saxon word for 'to embrace' because it is roughly the distance from one hand to the other if your arms are out-stretched.
There was a similar unit in Scandinavia and Germany. Shakespeare writes in The Tempest: Full fathom five thy father lies; Of his bones are coral made: Those are pearls that were his eyes: Nothing of him that doth fade, But does suffer a sea-change Into something rich and strange.
Fathoms were also used to measure the depth of coal seams and Cornish mines. Dolcoath Mine in Camborne was one of the deepest with a level at fathoms or feet vertical drop. There is a local saying about a person who keeps him or herself to themselves as being "as deep as Dolcoath". To fathom something means to throroughly understand it or get to the bottom of it.
This could come from taking a sounding from a ship, which would be measured in fathoms. Shackles were a measure of the length of cable. According to a 19th Century Seamanship Manual, ships were usually equipped with 12 shackles of bower cable where each shackle was a These When paying out the anchor cable, counting the number of shackles passing gave a measure of the length used. In , the Royal Navy switched from Modern heavy mooring chain is usually sold in 15 fathom lengths or 'shots' an American term.
The specification sheets quote the number of links per shot. The cable is a tenth of a nautical mile. Since the nautical mile has altered, so has the cable. The metric equivalent left is based on the old Imperial length of feet.
The cable seems to be a measure of length along the surface, rather than a measure of depth, or even the length of an anchor cable. An anchor cable will always be an integral number of shackles long, but the unit cable is 6.
At the same time, their cable became a tenth of the International Nautical Mile. Nautical miles measure distance. As these differ slightly ' at pole and ' at equator was adopted this being its approximate value in the English Channel. The International nautical mile is metres, so is very slightly different from the UK nautical mile The metric equivalent on the left is in kilometres to 2 decimal places, which ducks the whole problem. If you want an irrelevant fact, one minute of arc on Mars is close to a kilometre.
Perhaps the French who defined the kilometre were really Martians! The kilometre, like the nautical mile, was also defined as one minute of arc on a great circle on the earth.
However, it was one minute of arc in the new French revolutionary decimal system, in which a circle was made up of degrees, each of minutes. Of course disputes over the standard size of a great circle on the earth meant it wasn't absolutely exact, but it's exceedingly close! A knot is a nautical mile per hour. Hands are used to measure horses. You measure from the ground to the withers of the horse its shoulder since it won't keep its head still. A palm was 3 inches. A hand is an inch bigger.
Possibly the idea was that a hand was the width of the hand including the thumb, and a palm was the width excluding the thumb. A nail was 2 and a quarter inches. It was a cloth measure. Thinking about it, this can't be a human nail as it's too large. It must be a small metal nail. How many feet is 4 yards fabric? A yard is 36 inches or 3 feet. Just multiply 4 feet times 3 feet and there you have it; 12 square feet of fabric. Is 10 yards equal to 30 feet? Yards to Feet table Yards Feet 9 yd What is the ratio of 2 feet to 2 yards?
Is 2 yards bigger than 5 feet? The greater length would be 2 yards. How many inches is 7 ft wide? Is yards more than feet? A yard is equal to 3 feet. Yards are usually measured by a yardstick, which equals 1 yard. Does 9 yards equal 3 yards? What is Yard?
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