No. A yard is equivalent to 3 feet so you would need 5 yards to have 15 feet of fabric
There are 36 inches in one yard, so 108/36 = 3 yards, therefore Francine need another 9 yards of fabric.
you would multiply 0.34 by 7= 2.38 yards of fabric
A yard is 3 feet 42 / 3 = 14 yards
With fabric 54" wide for every two yards you will get 4 of the runners. You are going to have fabric waste and will end up with enough for 16 runners but you have to buy 8 yards to get at the least your 13 runners because of the 72" length
A bolt of cotton fabric for quilting is usually 15 yards; 42"-43" wide. A bolt of fleece fabric is usually 10 yards for licensed fleece fabric, and 10-12 yards for non-licensed fabric.
9 feet of fabric
There are 5.4680665 yards in 5 meters of fabric. 5 meters x 1.0936133 yards/1 meter = 5.4680665 yards 1 meter = 1.0936133 yards
If you have 6 yards (or 18 feet) of fabric and you need 14 feet (or 4 2/3 yards), you have 4 feet (or 1 1/3 yards) moe than you need.
1.68 + 1.5 + 1.26 = 4.44. To the nearest yard, this is 4 yards but that would be of little use. He needs 5 yards, and the question should refer to the least number of whole yards rather than the "nearest yard".
In the USA, fabric is sold by the yard (3 feet). In metres, in most countries.
Area of first piece = 5 yards * 60 inches = 300 inch-yards Suppose length of equivalent area of 57" fabric is x yards then x*57 = 300 or x = 300/57 = 5.26 yards (approx).
You will need 7.1 square yards of fabric.