Imperial and US customary (non-metric) unit of volume.
The volume equal to a cube one foot on each side.
1Assume the lifting capacity of helium is .067 pounds per cubic foot.
2On every twelve square feet a cubic foot of water was needed.
3And 25 grains per cubic foot will put a hayfever sufferer in misery.
4The rates vary from ¼ to ¾ of a cent per cubic foot.
5Its wood is compact and heavy, weighing forty-four pounds to the cubic foot.
6A cubic foot of water weighs sixty-two and a third pounds.
7Remember that each person requires one cubic foot of fresh air every second.
8The company is fined for each cubic foot of pollutants over the legal limit.
9The weight of a cubic foot of mahogany varies from thirty-five to fifty-three pounds.
10Their relative efficiency under water per cubic foot, according to Bucknill, is as follows:
11Every cubic foot of atmospheric air, driven into a furnace, consists of two gases.
12Density-Massof unit volume, for instance, pounds per cubic foot.
13It weighs, dry, about 45 pounds per cubic foot.
14It was altogether not over a cubic foot in size, and enclosed in a glass cylinder.
15Each cubic foot of worm box can process about one pound of kitchen garbage each week.
16The variation for a 100 cubic foot cylinder at various temperatures is given in the following tabulation:
Translations for cubic foot