You cannot. A 3ft x 3ft square has an area of 9 square feet. 9 does not divide 1200 evenly.
1 yd = 3 ft (1yd x 1yd x 1yd) = 1 yd3 = (3ft x 3ft x 3ft) = 27 ft3
3ft in a yard 1yard/3ft=X/17 ft cross multiply 17ftx1yard=17ftyard/3ft = 5 2/3 yards
0 it has no depth
Circumference = r x pi and d = 2r. So, r = d/2 = 6/2 = 3ft and Circumference = 3ft x 3.14 = 9.42.
None. It is a hole and therefore contains nothing.
Depends on if your talking about a 'square yard' or a 'cubic yard'. A 'square yard' has 9 square feet (3ft x 3ft). A 'cubic yard' has 27 square feet (3ft x 3ft x 3ft)
A 3ft x 3ft x 3ft container would hold 27 cubic feet of liquid. As 1 cubic foot is equal to 7.48 gallons, the container would hold approximately 201.96 gallons of liquid.
Yes, using two 3ft x 3ft tiles.
You cannot. A 3ft x 3ft square has an area of 9 square feet. 9 does not divide 1200 evenly.
One cubic yard equals 27 cubic feet (3ft X 3ft X 3ft). So if you were able to slice that "cube" into 6 inch sections, you would have 6 slabs at 6in X 3ft X 3ft. Placed side to side 18ft x 3ft x 6in. For a total of 54 square feet at six inches deep.
Look at it this way: 1y2 is also shown as 1y x 1y So. if you now replace the 1y for 3ft then you get this: 3ft x 3ft And 3 x 3 = 9 3ft x 3ft = 9ft2 equal to 1y x 1y = 1y2 Hope this helps
3ft x 3ft x 1ft = 9 cubic feet of dirt will be needed.
27 cubic feet A cubic yard of dirt = 1yd x 1yd x 1 yd OR 3ft x 3ft x 3ft
1 yd = 3 ft (1yd x 1yd x 1yd) = 1 yd3 = (3ft x 3ft x 3ft) = 27 ft3
A square yard is 3ft by 3ft
Not without having to slice some tiles up ! The tiles you would need are:- 2 of 3ft x 3 ft 1 of 2ft x 3ft 2 of 3ft x 1 ft 1 of 2ft x 1 ft