you have to tickle ur toes then scrunch ur nose
and then follow it where ever it goes
diagonals
You need to know the lengths of the sides and at least one angle or the length of a diagonal.
To find the area of a figure with sides of different lengths, we first need to determine the shape of the figure. In this case, the sides are 5m, 3m, 4m, and 6m, which could form a quadrilateral or a triangle depending on the configuration. If it is a quadrilateral, we would need more information such as the angles between the sides to calculate the area. If it is a triangle, we could use Heron's formula to find the area. More details or a diagram would be necessary to provide an accurate calculation.
You cannot. A square can be distorted into a rhombus without changing the lengths of any of the sides, but with a different area. Similarly, the shape of any quadrilateral can be altered without affecting the length of its sides but changing its area.
The lengths of the sides of a quadrilateral are not enough to determine its area since the shape is not rigid: it can be flexed.
The name for a quadrilateral with 4 sides of all different lengths is simply "quadrilateral". All of the specializations of quadrilaterals: parallelogram, trapezoid, kite, rhombus, rectangle, and square, have at least one pair sides with the same length.
A rectangle is generally defined as a quadrilateral with four right angles. No rectangle can have four different side lengths by that definition. Finding the area of such a shape is therefore impossible.
A trapezoid is a 4 sided quadrilateral with 1 pair of opposite parallel sides of different lengths. Its perimeter is the sum of its 4 sides. Its area is: 0.5*(sum of parallel sides)*height
A trapezoid is a 4 sided quadrilateral which has one pair of parallel sides of different lengths. Its perimeter is the sum of its 4 sides. Its area is: 0.5*(sum of parallel sides)*height
If it is a cyclic quadrilateral, meaning that it can be inscribed in a circle, then you can use the formulawhere S is the semiperimeter (half the sum of all the sides) and a, b, c, and d are all side lengths. If it is not a cyclic quadrilateral or you are unsure if it is or not then use the formula:where S is the semiperimeter (half the sum of all the sides) and a, b, c, and d are all side lengths and A and B are the angle measures across from side lengths a and b.hope this helps
Assuming "liths" is an unusual way of spelling lengths, you cannot because a quadrilateral is not a rigid shape. It can be deformed into a quadrilateral with the same sides but a different area. This can be illustrated by thinking of a square deforming into a rhombus. Same sides but different area.
A quadrilateral has four sides with lengths, two diagonals with lengths, four inside angles, four outside angles, and an area. The angles are the only things you can measure with a protractor.