it doesn't quite work like that. A SQUARE yard means that it is a square, but each side measures a yard.
"Feet" describes a length or distance, like a piece of thread or a road trip. "Square feet" describes a flat area, like a bedroom wall or a football field. They're used to describe completely different quantities, and neither one can be converted into the other one. No matter how long your piece of thread is, it can't cover your front yard. "No matter how long your piece of thread is, it can't cover your front yard." Is actually incorrect. Depending on thickness of the thread, and length of thread, you COULD cover a yard with it. By reaching the end of your yard, and then running it back the other way side by side, this does not decrease the length of thread but it does allow you to cover said yard. Unless you mean "No matter how long your STRAIGHT piece of thread is, it can't cover your front yard." unless of course its a very thick thread.
It's usually between 130-135 lbs per cubic foot, depending on quarry, etc. etc.Converted to cubic yards (x27) = 3510 - 3645 lbs. per cubic yard
Most "yard" sticks are 36 inches long. You just happen to have an unusual one. Or maybe you should go back and take a closer look at it.
Cost = Base * Height (both measured in yards).
have your yard sale on a buisy road but not on a road with multiple cars
A lot --- a cubic yard of gravel could weigh around 1500 lbs.
you can use lots of block wood to make it look like a actual ball yard
It looks like a box--or cube--with base dimensions of 41" x 33" and stands 36" tall. So, it is a little more than 1 cubic yard.
Mulberry
wat
no a meter is
No, but a meter is.
Neither is an SI base unit.
i most certaintly have a cheap yard sale on millsberry,if you perhaps feel like stopping by mine,my username is artisticbeauty223.i live on ponderosa road,golden valley and im ALWAYS on so if you feel like adding me go ahead,hope you catch a glimpse of my yard sale soon.
yard - is not even metric - and thus NOT an SI base unitcm - is NOT a base unit -a cm is 1/100th of 1 meterK (for Kelvin) and meter are SI base units
Yes.