You can't convert meters into meters squared. One is a unit of length, the other is a unit of area. Informally, you might consider a (linear) meter as "infinitely thin". If you divide so-and-so many square meters by so-and-so-many meters, instead of getting a pure number, you get a number plus the unit, "meters". For example, 6 m2 / 3 m = 2 m.
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This question cannot be answered sensibly. A square yard is a measure of area, with dimensions [L2]. A metre is a measure of distance, with dimensions [L]. The two measure different things and basic dimensional analysis teaches that you cannot convert between measures with different dimensions such as these without additional information.
There can be no conversion. A yard is a measure of lengthin 1-dimensional space while a square yard is a measure of area in 2-dimensional space. The two measure different characteristics and, according to the most basic principles of dimensional analysis, any attempt at comparisons or conversions between the two are fundamentally flawed.
A meter is a unit of length. A square foot is a unit of area. The two things are different.
There are roughly 3.28 feet in one meter, but a foot is not the same as a square foot.
A foot is a unit of length. A square yard is a unit of area. The two units are therefore incompatible.