it is a yard by a yard or length X width
A yard is a unit of length. Weight does not feature in length. Except of course I have misunderstood your question.
"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.
bobo!
Yard
That's going to depend on pretty nearly all of the following details:-- length of the front yard-- width of the front yard-- 3 cubic yards of WHAT ?-- how deep it has to be
In general, the length of a foorstep can be approximated as 1 yard (or 1 meter).
The average footstep is about 2.5 feet long, but this can vary depending on the person's height and stride length.
The front yard's volume would be 240 cubic feet. This is calculated by multiplying the length (12 feet) by the width (20 feet) by the depth (1 foot).
it is a yard by a yard or length X width
Front Yard Luge was created in 1999.
Possibly, it depends if you have a tree in your front yard.
I would love to landscape my front yard. Where can one find information on front yard landscaping?
A length of 1 yard is 1 linear yard!
A length can't be converted to an area. (No matter how long your piece of thread is, it can't cover your front yard.)
What kind of yard? A front yard? The back yard? The side yard? It depends on the size of the yard and the cost of an acre of property. What? That's not what you meant? Perhaps you meant the horizontal pole that supports a sail on a ship. That, too, depends on its size and the price of lumber. No? Perhaps you meant the unit of length, which is equivalent to three feet or 12 inches or 0.9144 meter. Or perhaps you meant the unit of volume, which should be really called a cubic yard, because the yard is a unit of length, not volume. In practice, however, many dealers of sand and gravel will sell it by the yard, but they really mean cubic yard.
The Big Front Yard was created in 1958-10.