Not drawn to “scale”.
How many city busses in a football field?
Lost again!!!!
What, no “Olympic-sized swimming pool”?
Too bad USA never got with the metric system, still stuck in imperial confusion
A bushel and a peck.
Should be a yard and an inchworm up there too.
I have a friend whose family used to say “it’s big as a bird.”
One butt of wine equals two hogsheads, or 126 gallons of wine … mmmm Hog-Butts-Wine!
That’s an awfully large sign. Did somebody mismeasure the sign?
By the numbers:
A dollar bill is 6.14 inches long or about the size of an adult’s hand.
10 dollars laid end-to-end is a bit over 5 feet or the size of a child.
100 dollars is about 51 feet or slightly wider than a basketball court.
1,000 dollars is 511 feet or the distance from the box seats to the outfield wall in a baseball stadium. (Ballpark estimate).
1,000,000 dollars is about 96 miles or a road trip from Manhattan to downtown Philadelphia.
1,000,000,000 (billion) dollars is about 97,000 miles or 3.8 trips around the world.
1,000,000,000,000 (trillion) is 97,000,000 miles or about the distance from the Sun to the Earth also known as an Astronomical Unit or AU.
The national debt is 35 trillion dollars or 36.5 AU. This many dollar bills laid end-to-end would extend to beyond the orbit of Neptune.
The national debt is literally astronomical.
Where’s the banana?
We have to improvise until they release the new King Charles rulers and tape measures.
I thought it was bigger than a bread box. And there must be a hail division somewhere!
No Empire State Building? No head of a pin?
who Needs metric, am I right?
His work is en-gauge-ing.
No standard swallow, elephant, or gorilla?
In the UK, a double-decker bus was somehow engrained as a measure of volume. Fortunately, it did not make it into metrication.
Bring back the Cubit !
John Deering and John Newcombe
John Deering
SHAKEDOWNCITY about 1 month ago
Not drawn to “scale”.
Say What Now‽ Premium Member about 1 month ago
How many city busses in a football field?
SHIVA about 1 month ago
Lost again!!!!
pschearer Premium Member about 1 month ago
What, no “Olympic-sized swimming pool”?
Joe Bo Premium Member about 1 month ago
Too bad USA never got with the metric system, still stuck in imperial confusion
thebashfulone about 1 month ago
A bushel and a peck.
The Orange Mailman about 1 month ago
Should be a yard and an inchworm up there too.
E.Z. Smith Premium Member about 1 month ago
I have a friend whose family used to say “it’s big as a bird.”
Kornfield Kounty about 1 month ago
One butt of wine equals two hogsheads, or 126 gallons of wine … mmmm Hog-Butts-Wine!
Huckleberry Hiroshima about 1 month ago
That’s an awfully large sign. Did somebody mismeasure the sign?
dflak about 1 month ago
By the numbers:
A dollar bill is 6.14 inches long or about the size of an adult’s hand.
10 dollars laid end-to-end is a bit over 5 feet or the size of a child.
100 dollars is about 51 feet or slightly wider than a basketball court.
1,000 dollars is 511 feet or the distance from the box seats to the outfield wall in a baseball stadium. (Ballpark estimate).
1,000,000 dollars is about 96 miles or a road trip from Manhattan to downtown Philadelphia.
1,000,000,000 (billion) dollars is about 97,000 miles or 3.8 trips around the world.
1,000,000,000,000 (trillion) is 97,000,000 miles or about the distance from the Sun to the Earth also known as an Astronomical Unit or AU.
The national debt is 35 trillion dollars or 36.5 AU. This many dollar bills laid end-to-end would extend to beyond the orbit of Neptune.
The national debt is literally astronomical.
eolan59 about 1 month ago
Where’s the banana?
PoodleGroomer about 1 month ago
We have to improvise until they release the new King Charles rulers and tape measures.
halvincobbes Premium Member about 1 month ago
I thought it was bigger than a bread box. And there must be a hail division somewhere!
The Brooklyn Accent about 1 month ago
No Empire State Building? No head of a pin?
Mike Baldwin creator about 1 month ago
who Needs metric, am I right?
Frank Burns Eats Worms about 1 month ago
His work is en-gauge-ing.
willie_mctell about 1 month ago
No standard swallow, elephant, or gorilla?
mistercatworks about 1 month ago
In the UK, a double-decker bus was somehow engrained as a measure of volume. Fortunately, it did not make it into metrication.
Voxx about 1 month ago
Bring back the Cubit !