Sentences with phrase «diameter circles from»

Flowers: Cut five 3 - inch - diameter and one 1 / 2 - inch - diameter circles from one color of felt.

Not exact matches

Use a 3 - inch biscuit cutter to cut out circles of dough, then use a lid from a plastic soda or water bottle (about 1 1/8 - inch diameter) to cut the holes.
Going back to each round, take a small rolling pin or dowel and, keeping away from the very center (leaving a nickel or quarter size area of thickness in the center), roll the wrapper from near center toward you, spin 1/4 turn, do the same all the way around until it's about 3 1/4» in diameter with a slightly thicker «belly» than the rest of the circle.
Roll the dough from the center outward on the parchment to form a 14 - inch diameter circle.
Remove second dough disk from fridge and on a floured surface, roll it out into a circle, about 10 inches in diameter.
When the dough has chilled, remove one disk from the fridge and on a floured surface, quickly roll it out into a circle, 12 inches in diameter.
Roll dough from center to the edges forming a circle about 13 inches in diameter.
From your brown cardstock paper, cut out two circles, one 4 - inches in diameter and one 2 1/2 - inches in diameter.
Preliminary studies indicate that it circles some 4 billion miles from the sun and is more than half the diameter of Pluto.
They appear to be at very similar distances from us — around 7 billion light years — in a circle 36 ° across on the sky, or more than 70 times the diameter of the Full Moon.
The tubes, each of which is about 53 centimeters in diameter and contains an arrangement of mirrors and lenses, send sunlight down to three hexagonal reflector shields hanging from the center of the circle.
The concept was straightforward — design and build a robot that could pick up inflatable game pieces (triangles, circles and squares each about a meter in the diameter) and hang them on pegs protruding from walls on either side of the 8.2 - by 16.4 - meter playing floor.
Judging from the scale bar in the scanning electron micrograph of this surface shown in Fig. 1b, the inner diameter of the circle is about 10 µm (10,000 nm).
objectives include: Year 6 objectives • solve problems involving the calculation and conversion of units of measure, using decimal notation up to 3 decimal places where appropriate • use, read, write and convert between standard units, converting measurements of length, mass, volume and time from a smaller unit of measure to a larger unit, and vice versa, using decimal notation to up to 3 decimal places • convert between miles and kilometres • recognise that shapes with the same areas can have different perimeters and vice versa • recognise when it is possible to use formulae for area and volume of shapes • calculate the area of parallelograms and triangles • calculate, estimate and compare volume of cubes and cuboids using standard units, including cubic centimetres (cm ³) and cubic metres (m ³), and extending to other units [for example, mm ³ and km ³] • express missing number problems algebraically • find pairs of numbers that satisfy an equation with 2 unknowns • enumerate possibilities of combinations of 2 variables • draw 2 - D shapes using given dimensions and angles • recognise, describe and build simple 3 - D shapes, including making nets • compare and classify geometric shapes based on their properties and sizes and find unknown angles in any triangles, quadrilaterals, and regular polygons • illustrate and name parts of circles, including radius, diameter and circumference and know that the diameter is twice the radius • recognise angles where they meet at a point, are on a straight line, or are vertically opposite, and find missing angles • describe positions on the full coordinate grid (all 4 quadrants) • draw and translate simple shapes on the coordinate plane, and reflect them in the axes • interpret and construct pie charts and line graphs and use these to solve problems • calculate and interpret the mean as an average • read, write, order and compare numbers up to 10,000,000 and determine the value of each digit • round any whole number to a required degree of accuracy and more!
Using a circle cookie cutter or an upside - down glass 2 1⁄2» to 2 3⁄4» in diameter, cut out as many little circles from the dough as you can.
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