The basic premise of your question is false. A lineal (or linear) metre of household tiles will NOT be more expensive than a square metre - unless they are gigantic tiles!
Needs more information!
A meter is about 3.3 ft long. So a square meter would be about = 3.3^2 = 10.89 ft^2. NOTE that's square feet (ft^2). Approximately. You can look up more precise numbers if you need them.
You cannot make a conversion, they are measuring two separate things. A running meter is a measurement of distance or length. A square meter is a measurement of area. If you run the parameter of an object, you will have to know more about the object to find out the square meters.
Its a bit more than 149 m^ but less than 151m^
A 50 kg bag of cement typically covers about 0.5 to 1 square meter when used for flooring, depending on the thickness of the layer applied and the mix ratio with aggregates. For a standard thickness of 5 cm for a concrete floor, you can expect to cover closer to 1 square meter. It's important to consider the specific project requirements and mixing proportions for more accurate estimates.
None, really. They both mean the length of one metre in a line. The word lineal, however, is more commonly used in the context of genealogy - the line of ancestors or descendants.
Obvoiusly depends where in Scotland you are looking, towns more expensive than the country.
Since a meter is more than a foot, a square meter is also more than a square foot.A meter is slightly more than a yard; to be precise:An inch is 2.54 cm. or 0.0254 meters.A foot is 0.3048 meters.A yard is 0.9144 meters.Since a meter is more than a foot, a square meter is also more than a square foot.A meter is slightly more than a yard; to be precise:An inch is 2.54 cm. or 0.0254 meters.A foot is 0.3048 meters.A yard is 0.9144 meters.Since a meter is more than a foot, a square meter is also more than a square foot.A meter is slightly more than a yard; to be precise:An inch is 2.54 cm. or 0.0254 meters.A foot is 0.3048 meters.A yard is 0.9144 meters.Since a meter is more than a foot, a square meter is also more than a square foot.A meter is slightly more than a yard; to be precise:An inch is 2.54 cm. or 0.0254 meters.A foot is 0.3048 meters.A yard is 0.9144 meters.
Approximately eleven. More exactly, there are 10.7639 square feet per square meter.
1 square meter is 19.6% more area than 1 square yard.
To determine population density, divide the number of flamingos by the area they occupy. For 15 flamingos in a 5 square meter area, the density is 3 flamingos per square meter. For 40 flamingos in a 10 square meter area, the density is 4 flamingos per square meter. Therefore, the population of 40 flamingos in a 10 square meter area is more dense.
1 meter=1.0936133 yards, therefore 1 square meter equals 1.0936133 yards squared. One square meter = 1.19599004993689 square yards. Answer to the question: -- 1 square meter is 19.6% more area than 1 square yard is. -- The sides of a square that encloses 1 square meter of area has sides that are 9.36% longer than the sides of a square that encloses 1 square yard of area.
1 meter = 3.281 feet (rounded)1 square meter = 10.76 square feet (rounded)* * * * * * *yes, more than 10 times larger.
A foot is a measure of distance. A square metre is a measure of area. The two measurements are therefore incompatible.(There are slightly more than 10.76 square feet in 1 square meter)
No. The lineal footage may be in the form of any shape: a circle, ellipse, triangle, quadrilateral, another polygon or any irregular random closed shape. Unless you have more information, your question is unanswerable.
The square mile (town size) is hugely larger than a square meter (closet size). 1 square mile is more than 2,590,000 square meters 1 square meter = about 10. 764 square feet = about 0.000000386 square miles (about 386 billionths)
This can not be answered without more information. You need to know the width of the item being measured by length (which is what lineal foot refers to). If it is a roll of carpet 25 feet wide, you would need 100 lineal feet to cover 2500 sqare feet. If it is a 2.5 foot counter top, you would need 1000 lineal feet. Divide 2500 by the width in feet of the material being measured and you will get the number of lineal feet required.