yes
Base times height tims width equal to length
No, length times width is not the same as base times height. In geometry, length times width typically refers to the area of a two-dimensional shape, such as a rectangle. On the other hand, base times height is commonly used to find the area of a triangle or a parallelogram. The formulas for calculating area differ depending on the shape being measured.
base times width times height
You multiply base times width times height
to find the volume you do base times width times height.
The volume of a rectangular prism is the length times the width times the height. The area of the base is length times width. Multiply that by the height. 384 cubic cm.
count the squares inside, but if you are looking for the real formulas: parallelogram= base times height , triangle =1/2 base times height trapezoid = 1/2 height times (base 1+ base 2) rectangle = length times width, square= length times width. hope this helped!
The height of scaffold tower is four (4) times the minimum base width.
Base times Width times height. Take the measurement of the base, multiply it by the measurement of the width and multiply it all again by the measurement of the height. B*W*H=Cube another way of saying it: volume: multiply the length times the length times the length. Surface area: length times width times six.
length x width, or base times height
the volume is (base)(height)(width) ... base x height x width
Base and height