Many countries use a penny in their coinage, but they are of different sizes. You need to specify which country.
50,000
First of all it is highly unlikely to have a square foot. But if someone does have a square foot u should specify the shoe size. e.g. a size 10 US shoe will hold 132.3 pennies.
yes it can
A standard penny is about 1.52 millimeters thick. To make a foot, which is 12 inches or 304.8 millimeters, you would need approximately 200 pennies stacked on top of each other (304.8 mm divided by 1.52 mm per penny). So, around 200 pennies will make a stack that reaches one foot high.
A penny is roughly 3/4" in diameter, if placed side by side it would take 2010 pennies to equal 134 feet.
There are 49,152 pennies in a cubic foot. That's a little over 300 pounds of pennies.
The diameter of a US penny is 0.75inches. There are 256 pennies in a square foot
256 pennies in one square foot. 16pennies in a row = 12 inches
50,000
First of all it is highly unlikely to have a square foot. But if someone does have a square foot u should specify the shoe size. e.g. a size 10 US shoe will hold 132.3 pennies.
There are 304 pennies in a square foot 16 pennies = 12 inch line. 16 X 16 = 256 *************************************************************** Despite the difference of 48 pennies between the two answers above, both answers could be correct. If pennies were square, then answer #1 would be incorrect. Answer #2 relies on the pennies being arranged in a grid pattern. 16 x 16 = 256. However pennies are circular and can be "nested" when arranged. That means that the first row would be 16 pennies. The second row would be 15 pennies, the third row would be 16 again, then 15 again, etc. Because of the nesting, additional rows can be added in the same square foot of space. I haven't tried to see how many more pennies could be accommodated by this nesting (or "staggering") so I don't know if the 304 is an accurate count in such a case. However there would certainly be more pennies per square foot in a nested arrangement than in a grid arrangement.
Approximately 38 pennies laid out in a row equal one foot.
You would need to lay 4926 UK pennies to form a line that is 10 metres long.
yes it can
Rough estimation here, but about 3 rolls of pennies. So..150 pennies.
It would be 16 pennies!
It would depend on how many pennies they had!