The answer depends on their relative dimensions.
a Stengel!
It can be any rectangle having a combination of width and length that, when multiplied together, yield a product of 100 squares. The rectangle could be 1 square wide and 100 squares long, or 5 squares wide and 20 squares long, or it could be a plane square with 10 squares wide on each side.
3/6 is red, 2/6 is Blue, 1/6 is yellow
(1-cm x 1-cm) = 1 cm2 (4-cm x 2-cm) = 8 cm2 Eight (8) of the little ones will completely cover the big one.
5/12 of the squares, which is 4+1/12.
To have 12 same size squares in a rectangle the grid of squares will be 1x12, 2x6 or 3x4. This means that the ratio of the length to the width is either 1:12, 2:6, 3:4, 4:3, 6:2 or 12:1. If the ratio of the length to width is none of those, then 12 same-size squares cannot fit.
An example of a ratio would be 1:2, say you have two squares, one of the side lengths on the square is 4 inches, the other is 2 the ratio of the smaller rectangle to the larger rectangle is 1 to 2, or 1/2 of the larger rectangle.
26,928 1" x 1" squares to cover 187 square feet.
-- The area of each little square is 1 square meter. -- The area of the big square is 9 square meters. -- So 9 little ones will cover the big one. Note: If the big one wasn't in the shape of a 3m x 3m square or a 1m x 9m rectangle, then you might have to cut up some of the little ones to make them fit the shape, but even so, 9 of them would exactly cover the bigger shape.
A rectangle with dimensions of 1" x 2" .
4
When two squares share a common side, they can be combined to form a larger shape known as a rectangle. By aligning the shared side of the squares, the resulting shape will have two pairs of equal sides and four right angles. This new shape will have a different area and perimeter compared to the individual squares.