12 inches
9 inches
If the paper is in inches then 11 times 14 = 154 square inches
Generally it is 8x12 inches.
105 square inches is:6.774 square decimeters677.4 square centimeters0.06774 square meters0.7292 square feetAbout the area of letter paper (93.5 square inches)
192 square inches!
9 inches
Oh, dude, let me do the math for you. So, an 8.5 inches by 11 inches paper has a total of 93.5 square inches. Yeah, that's right, like, you can cover 93.5 square inches with that piece of paper. Cool, right?
When a square paper is folded vertically to form a rectangle with a perimeter of 39 inches, the length of the rectangle is 19.5 inches (half of the perimeter). Since the length of the rectangle is the same as the side length of the original square, the area of the original square can be calculated as the square of the side length, which is 19.5 inches squared, equaling 380.25 square inches.
The length of a long bond paper is typically 17 inches.
Well, honey, to wrap that rectangular prism, you gotta find the surface area. Add up the area of all six sides: 2(8x8) + 2(8x10) + 2(8x10) = 320 square inches. So, you'll need at least 320 square inches of wrapping paper to cover that bad boy.
The square root of the area of the paper.
8 inches x 8 inches = 64 square inches = the area of the piece of paper. Length and width are used to find the area of an object, not the volume (cubic inches). To find the volume of the piece of paper you need to know the depth of the sheet of paper. You might be able to find this out with a Google search.
It's not a matter of converting. It's a matter of deciding what you are going to measure. Inches measure length. An ordinary desk ruler is 12 inches in length. A yardstick, three feet, is 36 inches long. Square inches measure an area, not a length. The area of an ordinary standard (8.5 inches by 11 inches) piece of printer paper is calculated by multiplying the two dimensions together: 11 X 8.5 = 93.5 square inches.
If the paper is in inches then 11 times 14 = 154 square inches
12x12 paper is 12 inches on each side; the area of a sheet of 12x12 paper is 144 square inches or one square foot.
Generally it is 8x12 inches.
Zero. A sheet of paper has no capacity or volume. A good way to visualize "cubic feet" is to think about how much water the object could hold inside of it, like quarts or gallons. A "cubic foot" is just another way of describing a space that can hold about 7 and a half gallons. If an object has no space inside it, like a sheet of paper, then it has no gallons and no cubic feet.