Cubic meters CANNOT equal any square measurement
Any unit of length can be converted into a unit of volume by the preface "cubic" e.g., inches become cubic inches, meters become cubic meters, etc.
No. You cannot convert cubic meters in length, width, and height without any further information.
Loose cubic meters refer to the volume of material, such as soil or aggregates, when it is not compacted or settled. It is the measurement of how much space the material occupies in its loose state, before any compaction or consolidation.
You can take any linear measure and cube it. There is no theoretical limit to how big your units can be, for example, cubic meters, cubic kilometers, cubic light-years, cubic megaparsecs, cubic gigaparsecs... whatever you wish.
Usually cubic meters, cubic decimeters (= liters), or cubic centimeters (= milliliters). In general, you can use any cubic measure (the cube of any measure of length); for example, for outer space, "cubic light-years" or "cubic parsec" is sometimes used.
Volume refers to the amount of space something takes up. Commonly used units include cubic meters, liters, or cubic centimeters - or any other "cubic" unit (cubic feet, cubic light-years, etc.)
1 cubic meter = 1 000 liters (of water or any other liquid)
there is Zero cubic meters of soil in the hole, after all if there was any soil in the hol eit wouldn't be hole, now would it?? To answer your question, you must also know the length of the hole, them multiply all of the measurements together to find the cubic space of the hole.
Any unit of volume, such as liters or cubic meters.
You don't convert square meters to cubic meters. Those units are utterly incompatible.You don't convert square meters to cubic meters. Those units are utterly incompatible.You don't convert square meters to cubic meters. Those units are utterly incompatible.You don't convert square meters to cubic meters. Those units are utterly incompatible.
Cubic inches or cubic meters. Take any unit of length and cube it and that is a unit for volume