The answer will depend on the width of the fabric and also on how much fabric is required for the garment and whether or not that is along the bias.
The cost per linear meter is the cost per square meter times by the width of the roll.
About 10.764 square feet per square meter.
10.7639
I'm going to say that there are roughly 10 blade of grass per square centimeter, which would mean there are roughly 100,000 blades of grass per square meter.
4.94 per sq meter so rounded up to 5 per sq meter
Linear meter is a standard meter and is 39.37 inches long. So, something that is per-linear meter would be divided by a linear meter.
250 linear grams
The meter is, by definition, a unit of distance or linear measurement. It is not necessary to say "linear," unless you are emphasizing the difference from square meters or cubic meters.So, to answer your question, there is one linear meter per meter, because they are one and the same.Another answerA linear meter is a commonly-used phrase and description for lengths of fabric.A linear meter is a meter length from a roll of fabric. Usually in Europe the width of the roll is 1.46m, so a linear meter is an oblong 1m x 1.46mSo (in this particular example):1 x Linear Meter = 1.46 square metersOne.
The cost per linear meter is the cost per square meter times by the width of the roll.
Multiply Imperial gallons/foot by 14.915
The exact value is 9.7841 so I expect 9.79
That would depend on the cross sectional area of that linear meter of steel and as you have not told us that we can not answer you. To work out the answer for yourself you need to know the VOLUME of your steel and you multiply this by the density of your steel to give you a weight.
Lm is a vague term created by people in some particular industry. It could probably mean 'linear meter', which is a term used to clarify a distinction between width and length when selling fabric "off the roll" such as carpet or clothing material. Example: a piece of fabric may be 1.2 meter wide and its price is always expressed as 'so many dollars per linear meter', regardless of its width. They use the term "linear" to make it clear to the buyer that its width is not considered as a pricing factor for the quantity of the material that is being sold. Carpet can be made in several different widths, but the pricing is always 'so many dollars per linear meter'. It is never sold according to its total area. Carpet tiles and ceramic tiles are sold as so many dollars per square meter, not per linear meter.
The SI unit is the kilogram per meter (kg/m).
You cannot, without information about the width.
To be able to answer this question some very basic information is needed:what exactly is the type of material that is on the roll from which a linear meter is to be cut?what is the dry density (dry weight per square meter) of that material, measured in kilograms per square meter?is the material dry or wet?if wet, what is the volume of water that the material holds per square meter?If the question is asked again - giving that information - someone may be able to give it a much better answer than this one!
Copper is priced in terms of its mass, not its length.