No.
No.
There are narrow twin is 36" by 75" and the regular twin is 39" by 75". But then there is the college matress which is 36" by 80". It is very important to know the size of your twin mattress, actually any matress so you know the proper sheet size to get for your bed.
No. A twin mattress measures 39" (wide) by 75" (long) A queen mattress measures 60" by 80" So two twin mattresses, side by side, would be 5" shorter and 18" wider than a queen mattress.
Technically yes, in the same sense that you can use a 4" plate for an 8" steak. A twin box spring is considerably smaller (slightly shorter and much narrower) than a queen mattress. The mattress will stick out nearly a foot on each side of the box spring, and a few inches at either the top or bottom (or both).
No.
No.
There are narrow twin is 36" by 75" and the regular twin is 39" by 75". But then there is the college matress which is 36" by 80". It is very important to know the size of your twin mattress, actually any matress so you know the proper sheet size to get for your bed.
UH, NO! Absolutely not!!! You could cause a rift in the time-space continuom. You have to use a king headboard with a twin-size matress. Otherwise, you could violate your local tenants law. Doing so also has a very negative effect on your credit score. What a question! Maybe you could explain what you mean, because, if you mean what I think you mean . . . no, surely you can't be serious. The real answer is YES, you can use a queen headboard with a queen matress, of course.
No. A twin mattress measures 39" (wide) by 75" (long) A queen mattress measures 60" by 80" So two twin mattresses, side by side, would be 5" shorter and 18" wider than a queen mattress.
No. A twin mattress measures 39" (wide) by 75" (long) A queen mattress measures 60" by 80" So two twin mattresses, side by side, would be 5" shorter and 18" wider than a queen mattress.
Technically yes, in the same sense that you can use a 4" plate for an 8" steak. A twin box spring is considerably smaller (slightly shorter and much narrower) than a queen mattress. The mattress will stick out nearly a foot on each side of the box spring, and a few inches at either the top or bottom (or both).
No. Two twin beds put together is the same size as a King-size bed.
No - a Full bed is 54" wide and a Queen is 60" wide, the difference between them is only 6". In addition, twin and full beds are both 75" long, but a Queen is 80" long. HTH.
They will not. A queen size bed is 60" x 80" and a twin size is 39" x 75" and an XL twin would be 39" x 80". Two XL twin box springs are what you would use for a king size bed.
You could possibly do this, but your box spring will be about 9" too wide and 5" too short. A queen mattress is 60" x 80". A twin regular mattress is 39" x 75". An extra long twin would be 80" long.
"Box spring mattresses come in different sizes. There are single, double, queen and king mattress. When you go from a single to a queen or king mattress, the width and length both change. A twin measures at 39x75. A queen measures at 60x80 and a king is 76x80 inches."