i think it's length x width x height
This is clearly lifted from some test paper, omitting the vital diagram. The volume of a rectangular prism is the area of the base multiplied by the height. Same for a cube.
If it is a cube (basically a square) or a rectangular prism multiply the top, the length, and the base.
Volume of a Rectangular Prism The volume of a rectangular prism can be found by the formula: volume=length*width*height
Volume of rectangular prism = area of base x height
To determine how many small cubes are needed to fill a right rectangular prism, you first need to calculate the volume of the prism by multiplying its length, width, and height. Then, calculate the volume of one small cube by cubing its side length. Finally, divide the volume of the prism by the volume of the small cube to find the total number of cubes required.
To find the volume on a rectangular prism, the equaton is: length*width*height
-- Measure the length, width, and height of the prism. -- Multiply the three numbers. The result is the volume of the prism.
base times height
You divide its mass by its volume.
No.
Volume of any prism = cross-section area times length
You can't tell the dimensions of a rectangle from its area, or the dimensions of a prism from its volume.