One would have to know the size of the bricks.
Using a scale, the box of bricks, and the object, keep putting bricks or pieces of bricks until the scales balance. Find out how many bricks you put and multiply by the mass of one brick and you got the mass of the object.
50 is the norm, although you can buy bricks of .22LR with up to 600 in a single box.
The collective noun 'box' is used for a box of crayons or a box of matches.
You shift click on the stack you want to split, and a little box will pop up asking for the stack size. Either type in the number or use the arrows on the box to select a number. When you hit ok, the client will take out the number you selected and put it in a stack on your cursor, be sure to click on an empty space in you bags to create the new stack.
A collective noun for boxes is a stack of boxes.
The answer cannot be determined. To answer the question, assuming identical height boxes, we need to know the height of a box.
cupboards,bricks,toothpaste box,oven and eraser
Puzzle No 113: A Stack of Dice, Location: Northeast Path Answer =The number (6) is on top of the cube.
Jim Stack has written: 'Northwoods Furniture (Classic American Furniture Series)' 'Building Furniture for Country Living (Popular Woodworking)' 'Box by box' -- subject(s): Crafts, Nonfiction, OverDrive, Wooden boxes, Woodwork
get the lepracauns from the secret box and they give you a box which has cement and bricks
The stack will most likely topple. Other than that, the idea is to multiply the number of boxes by the height of each box. You may then want to divide the result by 100, to convert from cm to meters.
use all of the box men to create babies and then stack them for each level