¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Millimeters
1. millimeter [n] - See also: millimeter
Lexicographical Neighbors of Millimeters
Literary usage of Millimeters
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The American Monthly Microscopical Journal by Chas. W. Smiley (1888)
"Diameter of fibre, 0.016 to 0.020 millimeters. Twist good. Length. 27.2. ...
Length averages 37 millimeters, but this is only approximate, as the sample ..."
2. The Materials of Construction: A Treatise for Engineers on the Strength of by John Butler Johnson (1898)
"20, or 25 millimeters. The American Society gives regulations analogous to those
of the French Commission. It requires that with round test-pieces the ..."
3. The Materials of Construction: A Treatise for Engineers on the Strength of by John Butler Johnson (1904)
"20, or 25 millimeters. The American Society gives regulations analogous to those
of the French Commission. It requires that with round test-pieces the ..."
4. Bulletin by Kentucky Geological Survey, Kentucky State Geologist (1906)
"Flat specimens occur, having a width of 65 millimeters, and a height of less than
10 millimeters, with a concentrically wrinkled epitheca. ..."
5. Deficiencies in Reading Ability: Their Diagnosis and Remedies by Clarence Truman Gray (1922)
"The results are given in millimeters instead of words and so cannot be ...
The total extent of material in millimeters for four subjects is 21.7, 8.8, 23.9, ..."
6. Surgery, Gynecology & Obstetrics by The American College of Surgeons, Franklin H. Martin Memorial Foundation (1922)
"ANATOMY Anatomists give the dimensions of the normal female urethra (on physiological
distention) as 3.5 centimeters in length and 7.5 millimeters ..."