I am asking the question
number of fourths needed to make 2 whole and one half = 10
Three
46 of them.
I will have to make an assumption here. Correct me if I am wrong. 1) The 'pound' is the measure of weight equivalent to 16 ounces. 2) The 'stone' is the British measure of weight. If so, you could have Googled 'British stone' and gotten the answer. It is an informal weight of about 14 pounds. So, no, the stone is much bigger than the pound. If you weigh 140 pounds, you then weigh 10 stone.
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576 should do it.
216
272 Get 300 to be safe.
One should do it!
One should be more than enough!
If both items are measured in inches or feet, the half is the answer. Without more info. this cannot be answered.
To calculate the number of 15.7-inch patio stone pavers needed for an 8 by 15-foot patio, first convert the patio dimensions to inches: 8 feet = 96 inches and 15 feet = 180 inches. The area of the patio is 96 inches × 180 inches = 17,280 square inches. Each paver has an area of 15.7 inches × 15.7 inches = 246.49 square inches. Dividing the patio area by the paver area gives approximately 70 pavers needed (17,280 ÷ 246.49 ≈ 70).
15 x 15 = 225 sqft, each paver is 1 sqft so 225.
144
To determine how many 16 x 16 patio pavers are needed for a 24 x 24 patio, first calculate the area of the patio and the area of one paver. The area of the patio is 576 square feet (24 x 24), and the area of one paver is 2.222 square feet (16 x 16 = 256 square inches, which is 256/144 = 1.78 square feet). Dividing the patio area by the paver area (576 / 1.78) gives approximately 324 pavers needed.
8X14=112
let me try to understand what you mean; 20ft x 25ft area to be covered by 6"x6" pavers 20x25 is 500sq ft. 6"x6" is .25sq ft. 500/.25= 2000