A unit of length equal to 1,760 yards or 5,280 feet; exactly 1609.344 meters.
Sinónimos
Examples for "mile"
Examples for "mile"
1Within a mere ten-mile sea front four dioceses reach to the ocean.
2Two years ago there were no dairy farmers within a three-mile radius.
3Then, in 2013, the new two-mile approach was found from the north.
4Even within the five-mile circle the great majority of people were inert.
5The race is always two miles; 16 minutes is considered good time.
1Tomorrow morning before mi go home, the elderly man said on Monday.
2These studies point toward a potential role of miRNA in wound angiogenesis.
3A prognostic 4-miRNA model has been established using a random forest classifier.
4So, Comrades, mi feel seh mi can help pull the party together.
5La, la, la, la; mi, in E major, key of four sharps.
1The English statute mile, now obsolete in this country, is indeed just over 1,600 metres.
2The Survey has also engraved a map of Dublin City on the enormous scale of five feet to a statute mile.
3Divide the knots by the same decimal, and it gives the statute miles.
4The English land league is equal to three English statute miles.
5The axis of this band, almost a meadian line, is 156 statute miles long.
1The ship averages something in the low 20's of our land miles- per-hour.
2Twenty-five knots-twenty-eight land miles an hour-was the speed of the Plymouth at that moment.
3Peto are both named for a big, fast mackerel with a cruising speed of 30 land miles per hour.
4Making allowance for the longitudes and difference in time, this was an average daily run of 378 sea miles or 435 land miles.