You double the perimeter and 4X the area.
First answer: Yes, a rectangle can be a square if all it's sides are the same length. The definition of a rectangle is "a four sided figure where opposite sides are the same length. If all sides are 4 inches, then opposite sides will be equal.Second answer:~Yes, a rectangle can be a square. ~The definition of a rectangle: a parallelogram with four sides, the sides are parallel to each other, the sides parallel to each other are the same length, there are 4 right anglesDifference between a square and a rectangle: all of the sides are the same length in a squareConclusion: a square is always a rectangle but a rectangle isn't always a square.
Yes. The perimeter is a measure of the combined length of all the sides. If you double the lengths of the sides then naturally this will also necessarilychange the perimeter (it will double the perimeter).
Yes opposite sides are parallel in a rectangle
A square can be a rectangle because a rectangle just has to have four sides and they all have to have right angles, which a square does. But a rectangle can never be a square because a square HAS to have ALL EVEN sides with all right angles. A rectangle possibly could not have all even sides.
The fact that all of YOUR sides are equal tells me nothing about what is special about ME, as a rectangle!
That's a "rhombus". (We know it's not a rectangle, because a rectangle doesn't necessarily have all equal sides.)
All rectangles have 4 sides. All parallelograms have 4 sides. A rectangle is a parallelogram with all 4 angles of 90°
A rectangle!
a square's sides are all equal and can be called a rhombus but a rectangle's sides aren't all equal
no
no
A square is rectangle with all its sides are equal in length. The rectangle has: (a) opposites sides are parallel. (b) opposite angles are equal