Different rulers may have different marks between the inches. There could be half
inches, quarter inches, eighths, tenths, sixteenths, or even thirty-seconds of an
inch.
There may be more than one of these sets on the same ruler, and also, quite often,
there are marks in the first inch or two that are not continued on the rest of the
ruler.
It is in between 5 inches and 6 inches
One fourth of a ruler would be 3 inches. If you mean one fourth of an inch, then it would be between .2 and .3 inches.
Between 7/8 and 15/16
Whether on a ruler or anywhere else, it is still 1.35 inches. No ruler is graduated with at that level of detail. A tenth of an inch is typical. So you want a point halfway between 1.3 inches and 1.4 inches. Alternatively, you can draw a line of 1.35*2 = 2.7 inches (the ruler will measure that) and then bisect it.
You'll find out by looking at the distance between 0 and 4 on a ruler. Simple and easy!
If the lines are on the opposite side of the inches on the ruler, then yes. You must keep in mind, however, that a ruler is used for inches and that the centimeters may not be marked.
by the numbers that are marked there
I thing 5.
what does 3.14 look like on ruler
inches, centimeters and millimeters
You count them using natural numbers: 1, 2, 3, and so on. If there are 10 lines between the 5 cm mark and the 6 cm mark then each is worth 1/10 cm. Similarly, if there are 16 lines between the 3 inch and 4 inch marks then each line is worth 1/16 inches.
the use of ruler is for you to line straightly.1 ruler is equal to 1 foot. there are two lines there, the one is centimeters and inches.
The millimeters on a ruler are the tiny lines in between each centimeter
2 inches
it is just between 2.7 and 2.9 inches
There are 10 milimeters in 1 centimetre. The numbers on a ruler are usually centimeters. The little un-numbered lines that divide up the centimeters mark the milimeters.
It is in between 5 inches and 6 inches