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MeasurementMeasurement is the determination of the size or magnitude of something. Measurement isn't limited to physical quantities, but can extend to quantifying almost any imaginable thing such as degree of uncertainty, consumer confidence, or the rate of increase in the fall in the price of beanie babies[?]. In physics and engineering, measurement is the process of comparing physical quantities of real-world objects and events. Established standard objects and events are used as units, and the measurement results in a given number for the relationship between the item under study and the referenced unit of measurement. Measuring instruments are the means by which this translation is made. Metrology is the study of measurement. A metric is a standard for measurement. The quantification of phenomena through the process of measurement relies on the existence of an explicit or implicit metric, which is the standard to which the measure is referenced. If I say I am '5', I am indicating a measurement without conveying an applicable standard. I may mean I am 5 years old, 5 feet high, or 5-time world raquetball champion. Measuring physical quantities accurately is important in science, engineering and commerce. For example, the unit for length might be a well-known person's foot, and the length of a boat can be given as the number of times that person's foot would fit the length of the boat. Laws to regulate measurement were originally developed to prevent fraud. However, units of measurement are now generally defined on a scientific basis, and are established by international treaties. The history of measurements is a topic within the History of Science and Technology. The meter was standardized as the unit for length after the French revolution, and has since been adopted throughout most of the world. The United States and the UK are in the process of converting to the SI system. This process is known as metrication. Systems of measurement:
Measuring the ratios between physical quantities is an important sub-field of physics. Some important physical quantities include:
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The elder Chapdelaine sank deeper and deeper
chatted about their work.
"If there is anything," said the mother, "which could reconcile me
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nods, and were silent for a while, admiring the picture. Soon
work; then all arose and went out together.
The place where they had worked in the morning was yet full of
uprooting the alders, gathering a sheaf of branches in the hand and
the roots.html">roots and tearing up the whole bush together. The alders
their axes and stout wooden Prizes. They first cut the roots
against the bar, threw all their weight upon it. When their efforts
continued to bear heavily that he might raise the stump a little,
furiously level with the ground, severing one by one the remaining
stumping-machine with the aid of Charles Eugene. The pyramidal
chains which were then attached to the root passed over a pulley,
himself against the traces and showering earth with his hoofs. A
feet as by the stroke of fist; then the heavy steel blades a giant
upon the stubborn wood, while the horse took breath for a moment,
again. And afterwards there was still the labour of hauling. All is still licensed under the GNU FDL.
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