Height and weight written out
Height and weight written out Ask Question Asked 13 years ago Modified 6 years, 7 months ago
Radio-Energy Infrastructure Systems provides solar storage, BESS, C&I energy storage, telecom site power, residential PV, microgrids, off-grid systems, data centre UPS, peak shaving, and zero-carbon s...
Height and weight written out Ask Question Asked 13 years ago Modified 6 years, 7 months ago
In the United States, most style guides that I have encountered recommend including the second hyphen in situations such as "8-foot-long bridge." Here is how some guides frame their advice. From
Height and Weight — How to write them when abbreviations are not used Ask Question Asked 12 years, 1 month ago Modified 5 years, 4 months ago
Please provide the context for your quotation. Also, have you considered the audience for your work? Many non-American readers may not understand that *five-one" means "five feet & one inch"; British
That only works if they is a canopy overhead, and ''multiple understories'' is ambiguous, it could be taken to mean multiple discrete areas of under storey vegetation which might share a height.
12 If someone is 169cm tall, what is the most common way of saying their height in metres and centimetres in American/Australian/British English? I''m not interested in converting
According to Etymonline, Height, has many different possible origins. height (n.) Old English hiehþu, Anglian hehþo "highest part or point, summit; the heavens, heaven," from root of heah "hi...
So height is spelled as a compromise, maintaining the pronunciation of "hight" while being spelled with ei to reflect the Old English ties. The ei form is older--as the OED notes, hight was
For example, to answer the question, "How tall are you?" valid answers include: Five feet. Five foot three. Five feet, three inches. Why the discrepancy between feet and foot, seemingly only in the
1 The altitude is the height of an object or point in relation to sea level or ground level; the elevation is the height above a given level, especially the sea level. The flight data include airspeed and altitude.