No. All rectangles are not squares. Think of rectangles and squares as boxes. Would you be able to fit a rectangle into the square box? Nope. But you would be able to fit the square into the rectangle box. <---- Hope that helped. :)
16.
square or rectangles fit that description
Squares, rectangles, and all parallelograms all fit this description.
Infinitely many.
None.A rectangle is a 2-dimensional shape and therefore no 3-dimensional figure, such as a cube, can fit into it.
you are probably referring to the theory that all rectangles are squares but not all squares are not rectangles. the answer is simple; a rectangle has two sets of parallel line and 4-right angles, where as a square has the same description with one extra detail that it has 4-congruent sides as well. the reason that a square is a rectangle is because a square fits the description of two parallel sides and 4-right angles. A not all rectangles fit the description of a square because it does not have 4 congruent sides.
48- 2 inch circles with fit in a 12x16 rectangle.
The answer is Infinite...The rectangles can have an infinitely small area and therefore, without a minimum value to the area of the rectangles, there will be an uncountable amount (infinite) to be able to fit into that 10 sq.in.
It's very easy for two rectangles to have the same area and different perimeters,or the same perimeter and different areas. In either case, it would be obvious toyou when you see them that there's something different about them, and theywould not fit one on top of the other.But if two rectangles have the same area and the same perimeter, then to look at themyou'd swear that they're the same rectangle, and one could be laid down on the otherand fit exactly.
It isn't. The area of a rectangle is length x width. What you are doing is counting how many square units will fit in the shape.
i think you can get as many as u can or as many numbers can fit in the little rectangle