68, with 1/2 square left over
36 of them.
Imagine the rectangle divided into squares corresponding to length and width... Eg a 6" x 5" rectangle would have 5 rows of six one-inch squares, total 30, which would make its area 30 squinches
A Square Inch is a measurement of 1" X 1" used to measure area. It is the area inside a square that (as all squares do) has four equal sides that each measure an inch. Its as simple as I can put it.
Area of 8 inch square = 8*8 = 64 sq inches. Number of squares required = 6080/64 = 95
1,512 16-inch squares.
36 of them.
320 squares because in each square foot there would be 4 6 by 6 inch squares so you would do 80 times 4
If a 3-inch square was covered in 1-inch squares, you would need a total of 9 of the 1-inch squares to completely cover the 3-inch square. This is because you can fit a 1-inch square into each inch of the 3-inch square, resulting in a total of 9 squares to cover the entire area. Each of the smaller 1-inch squares would cover a portion of the larger 3-inch square, with no overlap or gaps if properly arranged.
There are 15 (12-inch by 12-inch) squares in 15 square feet. Each square foot consists of 144 (12-inch by 12-inch) squares. Therefore, 15 square feet would contain a total of 2160 (12-inch by 12-inch) squares.
One square foot can be divided into four 6 inch squares. Multiplying the number of square feet by 4 gives an answer of 4,000 6 inch squares in an area of 1,000 square feet.
There is no answer. A square is area. A yard is linear.
110 of them.
Eight half inch cubes would fill a one inch cube.
Imagine the rectangle divided into squares corresponding to length and width... Eg a 6" x 5" rectangle would have 5 rows of six one-inch squares, total 30, which would make its area 30 squinches
12 square feet
To fill it in,32400in3
144 1-inch squares. 36 2-inch squares.