This isn't as easy a question as basic arithmetic. There are several things in play here.
Firstly, the original string is garden twine. It's generally of a 'rot-able' nature. It's not intended for any great strength and is often spun from fibres that haven't been stripped of the debris from the retting process.
Basically you're not starting from a product with a known/sound tensile figure.
Secondly, tensile as in holding a weight, that's not something chugging on that weight, nor the effects of rain on the cordage either stretching, shrinking or loosening the twist and plies.
So, the dry tensile weight of an average piece of the cordage.
Measure off a metre of your cordage, slide it through the handles of a nylon shopping bag (I reckon the cordage will take weight that would tear a plastic one) and while keeping hold of both ends, slowly add in weight. Bags of sugar, tin cans, workout weights, etc., Just keep adding them up.
If you knot the cordage you alter the strain, and if you chain ply it you gain more strength, but the rope stretches and if it 'springs' it snaps. (why climbing ropes are only for one fall, even if they still look sound)
If the original fibres are well prepared, and if the original lay of the cordage is sound and subsequent plies are balanced, then it can be very good rope indeed.
If you're intending to cliff walk with it….well, I wouldn't, and I'd check your life insurance is okay for your nearest and dearest…..but if you're taking the dog for a walk, or making a tump type rope to gather stuff and bundle, or pull up a 'chute…it looks fine
Thinking on it, using it as a dog leash will give you a fair idea of it's strength anyway; all that running, pulling, jerking around will unravel and wear a loose rope in short order usually.
It's addictive stuff this cordage, isn't it ?
M