gesundt-height - meaning and definition. What is gesundt-height
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What (who) is gesundt-height - definition

LAWS THAT RESTRICT THE MAXIMUM HEIGHT OF STRUCTURES
Height restrictions; Height Act; Height restriction law; Height limit

gesundt-height      
Not to be confused with Gesundheit (which is often said after someone sneezes). Next time you sneeze and someone says that, answer back with: 28 inches. When they ask What? tell them 28 inches: the distance from the floor up to your geshundt
My geshundt-height is 28 inches.
Human height         
DISTANCE FROM THE BOTTOM OF THE FEET TO THE TOP OF THE HEAD IN A HUMAN BODY, STANDING ERECT
Average height; Peak height velocity; Human stature; Height of humans; Body height; Growth spurt; Constitutional short stature; Race and height; Median height; Human Height; Standing height; Personal height; Human heights; Body growth; Height of a human being; Average human height; Average human length; Human length; Tall stature; List of tallest peoples; Physical stature; Human physical stature; Height of a human
Human height or stature is the distance from the bottom of the feet to the top of the head in a human body, standing erect. It is measured using a stadiometer, in centimetres when using the metric system, or feet and inches when using United States customary units or the imperial system.
Néron–Tate height         
MEASURE OF THE ARITHMETIC COMPLEXITY OF A RATIONA POINT ON AN ABELIAN VARIETY
Néron-Tate height; Neron–Tate height; Neron-Tate height; Canonical height; Elliptic regulator; Tate-Néron height; Tate-Neron height; Néron-Tate pairing; Height pairing; Local height; Neron height
In number theory, the Néron–Tate height (or canonical height) is a quadratic form on the Mordell–Weil group of rational points of an abelian variety defined over a global field. It is named after André Néron and John Tate.

Wikipedia

Height restriction laws

Height restriction laws are laws that restrict the maximum height of structures.

There are a variety of reasons for these measures. Some restrictions limit the height of new buildings so as not to block views of an older work decreed to be an important landmark by a government. For example, in the Russian capital of Saint Petersburg, buildings could not be taller than the Winter Palace.

Other restrictions are because of practical concern, such as around airports to prevent any danger to flight safety.

Height restriction laws sometimes become a point of contention in cities due to their use in regulating the growth of the housing supply. Fast growth of housing supply benefits renters by producing low prices and more choice, while slow or no growth in housing supply benefits property owners by allowing them to charge higher prices. In this way, height restriction laws often become part of a class conflict even when their original purpose was innocuous.