None. Its a hole
18
To calculate the volume of dirt in the hole, you multiply the length, width, and depth together. Therefore, the volume of the hole would be 6 meters x 2 meters x 1 meter = 12 cubic meters. Thus, there are 12 cubic meters of dirt in the hole.
a lot of dirt.
You cannot answer this question mathematically as you do not know the length of the hole, if it is a square hole (i.e. 1m long) then there was 3m3 of dirt.However if it is a lateral thinking question then the answer is none. It is a hole, therefore it is empty
What is the answer for rounding 14389 to the nearest thousands
If it's a hole, there would be no dirt in it, right?
Theoretically, none. The amount of dirt excavated to create such a hole would be 1 cubic metre. However, excavated dirt (depending on the nature of the dirt) can increase in mass by up to a third the original size. That is why when you dig a big hole then fill it in (getting all the dirt back) the hole is raised on top not flat.
No dirt because its a hole
There is no dirt in the hole because a hole, by definition, is an empty space.
none, it is a hole
None. The size of the hole is a measure of space in which there is no dirt!
None. Since it is a hole, there is no dirt in it. A hole, by definition, must be empty.