two sides are 4 and two are 1 4+4+1+1=10=perimeter 4*1=4=area
What is a rectangle were the area is 10 and the perimeter
Perimeter: 32 m Area: 60 m
Perimeter = 10 + 10 + 12 = 32 units. Area = 48 square units
Yes. For instance, the rectangle measuring 1 by 10 has a perimeter of 22 and an area of 10, whereas the rectangle measuring 4 by 4 has a perimeter of 16 and an area of 16.
10 by 10
If you mean 10 inch per side, then the area = 10 x 10 = 100 square inches and the perimeter will be 4 x 10 = 40 inches.
No. For example, a 4x1 rectangle will have an area of 4 and a perimeter of 10. A 2x2 rectangle will have the same area of 4, but a perimeter of 8.
This question has no unique answer. A (3 x 2) rectangle has a perimeter = 10, its area = 6 A (4 x 1) rectangle also has a perimeter = 10, but its area = 4 A (4.5 x 0.5) rectangle also has a perimeter = 10, but its area = 2.25. The greatest possible area for a rectangle with perimeter=10 occurs if the rectangle is a square, with all sides = 2.5. Then the area = 6.25. You can keep the same perimeter = 10 and make the area anything you want between zero and 6.25, by picking different lengths and widths, just as long as (length+width)=5.
It depends. With a square with a side of 2, the perimeter is 8 while the area is 4. With a square with a side of 10, the perimeter is 40 while the area is 100. Usually, though, you'll find that the area is larger than the perimeter.
for area you times the two numbers and for perimeter you add the numbers
yes it can; a rectangle 5 by 2 has perimeter 14 and area 10 for example; a rectangle 10 by 2 has perimeter 24 and area 20, both greater.
Answer 100 ---- If the perimeter of a square is 40 meters, then each side has lenght 10 meters. This is because the formula for perimeter is 4L where L is the lenght. Now, the area is L2 which is 102 =100