It depends on what shape you are talking about.
yes
It means the base in a 3D figure. For example, if it was a pyramid. the bottom part would be the base and you get the area of that base
You multiply the base and the height of the parallelogram.
you multiple the base by the height
The answer depends on what part of the figure is shaded!
yes
If the figure is a rectangle, the area is 60. If the figure is a triangle, the area is 30.
If the figure is a rectangle, the area is 60. If the figure is a triangle, the area is 30.
It means the base in a 3D figure. For example, if it was a pyramid. the bottom part would be the base and you get the area of that base
you multiple the base by the height
You multiply the base and the height of the parallelogram.
The answer depends on what part of the figure is shaded!
The area of ANY triangle is base x height. The height must be measured perpendicular to the base. In the case of an isosceles triangle, if you know only the length of the sides, you can figure out the height by Pythagoras' Theorem.
area of a triangle is half the base times the height .5*22*28=308
base is the 2D face of a figure the height is the extension of the 2D face That's why Area=Base*Height
48in2. To find the area of any triangle - you divide the length of the base by 2, then multiply that figure by the height.
To calculate the area of a triangle - divide the length of the base by 2, then multiply that figure by the height. If the measurements are in centimetres, once you have your area - multiply your figure by 100 and you'll have the area in millimetres.