Good one.
One half foot squared is one quarter of a square foot (36 square inches).
if one feet is longer than the other, then it is pretty much normal
one hundredth of a foot.
One nanosecond.
All of it
I'm assuming you mean one meter deep with a one square meter footprint. The answer is 1*1*1=1m^3 = one cubic meter. Actually, that is how much dirt was taken out to make the hole. There should be no dirt in the hole, otherwise it wouldn't be a hole.
Good one.
The volume = 6 x 2 x 1 = 12 cubic meters Actually there is no dirt in a hole.
This is such an old one! Of course, there is no dirt in it because if there were, then there would be no hole!
The total volume of dirt which was in what is now a hole 3 feet long by 2 feet wide and 1 foot deep is 6 cubic feet. This same volume is now the amount of air which is in the hole. :-)
No dirt because its a hole
hmm that's a tough one maybe 24' by 2' by 10 inches worth of dirt
The volume of the hole can be calculated by multiplying its length, width, and depth: 3 ft (depth) x 2 ft (width) x 10 ft (length) = 60 cubic feet. Therefore, 60 cubic feet of dirt can be removed from the hole.
This sounds more like a riddle than a mathematics question. The answer is zero, as there is no dirt in a hole. Additionally, if this were an a test question to see if one could calculate a volume, the question would have to include a third dimension.
About two yards. One yard of dirt is 36 inches on a side, or 46,656 cubic inches. 15x20 foot by 2 inches is 86,400 cubic inches.
There are an infinite variety of shapes and dimensions that one cubic foot of space can have.