4,160 centimeters
The dimensions are 10 m by 6.5 m and so 10*6.5 = 65 square m
Length= 3 + 2W Area [65]= L x W You can use guess and check put plugging in 1,2,3... etc to do this one. I got Length= 13 and Width= 5 5 x 13 = 65
It has 65 sides.
Its length is 1+ square root of 66 ft and its width is -1+ square root of 66 ft
The area of a trapezoid is 1/2 times the sum of the bases * the height. In this case, we have the area of 65 = 1/2 * (13+13) * height. Solving for height, we have 65 * 2 / 26, so h = 5. If the two bases of a quadrilateral are of the same length, it is not a parallelogram, but a rectangle.
Another side is 5 inches, and two other sides are 13 inches.
The dimensions are 10 m by 6.5 m and so 10*6.5 = 65 square m
Length= 3 + 2W Area [65]= L x W You can use guess and check put plugging in 1,2,3... etc to do this one. I got Length= 13 and Width= 5 5 x 13 = 65
It has 65 sides.
Its length is 1+ square root of 66 ft and its width is -1+ square root of 66 ft
The area of a trapezoid is 1/2 times the sum of the bases * the height. In this case, we have the area of 65 = 1/2 * (13+13) * height. Solving for height, we have 65 * 2 / 26, so h = 5. If the two bases of a quadrilateral are of the same length, it is not a parallelogram, but a rectangle.
Nothing. If it's -65, you can use 65 and -1.
The answer is "NO"
They are: 12+82 = 65 or as 1+64 = 65
Yes, 65 is greater than 63.
64
65