30 feet
Tiled bathrooms and paved areas are common example.
-1
If you are an average adult, and if the road was flat/paved, than about 5 kms per hour
Area of paver = 4 in * 8 in = 4/12 ft * 8/12 ft = 32/144 = 2/9 sq ft Area to be paved = 9 ft * 12 ft = 108 sq ft Number of pavers = Area to be paved/Size of each paver = 108/(2/9) = 486
The Romans invented: The aqueducts The stone-paved roads the hypocaust (underfloor heating) A new and tougher type of concrete which also set underwater. The public bathhouses
pi*6.52 - pi*52 = 54.19247327 or about 54 square feet.
Inner radius of walk = R1 = 10/2 ft = 5 ft. Outer radius of walk = R2 = 5ft + 3 ft = 8 ft Area of fountain = pi*R12 = 78.54 sq ft Area of fountain + walk = pi*R22 = 201.06 sq ft So area of path = 201.06 sq ft - 78.54 sq ft = 122.52 sq ft.
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Texas has the most miles of paved roads, i believe it's somewhere around 250,000 miles of paved roads
Paved U.S. RoadsAccording to the most recent (2004) data, the percentage of the roads in the U.S. that are paved is 64.5%.
should be paved. Better is an adverb
Streets paved with water do not exist. The phrase "streets paved with water" is often used poetically or metaphorically to describe a place where it constantly rains or where water features are prominent.
Paved roads were a Roman innovation. They had a military purpose. The first paved road (the famous Appian Way) was built in 312 BC to speed up the movement of troops to the front of the Second Samnite War, which the Romans were fighting near Naples. Paved roads also made the transport of supplies to the troops at the front of in garrisons. Over the centuries the Romans built 80,500 kilometres of paved roads around the Roman Empire; 29 great military paved roads radiated from the city of Rome. The paved roads also saw civilian use and made trade and travel easier.
According to the most recent (1999) data available, 6.4%of the roads and highways in North Korea are paved.
Yes, paved can be used as an adjective -- a paved road. It's also the past tense and past participle of pave.
Ponce de Leon is known for his exploration of Florida in 1513 in search of the Fountain of Youth. He did not bring back any specific artifacts, but his exploration paved the way for Spanish colonization of the region.
On a paved road.