It depends on how high and the flatness of pad and size of 'bricks'
-Mine is that size and has about 300, 9x16 concrete breezeblocks in groups of 12.
2420
Just one. The first mobile phone was roughly the same dimensions as a single house-brick.
It isn't improper if it is a brick building. But a wood building with a brick veneer is not a brick building. Many people speak of a house as being a brick house, but it is probably a frame house with brick veneer. Perhaps that is what the question is about.
To underpin a mobile home that is 28 feet by 60 feet, you would first need to determine the perimeter, which is 2 × (28 + 60) = 176 feet. Assuming you want to use bricks for a continuous support foundation, you would typically need bricks placed at intervals along the perimeter, depending on local building codes and structural requirements. If you estimate that each brick covers about 7.5 inches (0.625 feet) in width, you would need approximately 282 bricks to cover the perimeter (176 feet / 0.625 feet per brick = 281.6, rounded to 282). However, this number may vary based on the design and spacing of the underpinning.
37.
My guess would be a reference to the crude, but common observation from many years ago: "She's built like a brick sh*t house." I used to wonder about the origin of that very strange comparison...
brick has one syllable.
A brick has 8 corners.
There is no way to answer that without a full review of your plans. Some of the things to consider: The size of your walls The size of your brick How many windows and doors What kinds of architectual details - soldiers, quoins ect. Brick Chimney/fireplace Will the front porch be bricked Every house is different.
A brick has 8 corners.
Yes, there are many brick roads.
In my part of the country, very few, since brick and wood are preferred almost exclusively.