The other two sides can be any length greater than 5 cm. There is no upper limit to their lengths.
A "square" is a figure that has four sides of equal length. To get its perimeter, you multiply any of the four sides by 4. If you mean a "quadrilateral" that has the stated sides, just add the sides together.
Area of square = (length of side)2 = (10cm)2 = 10*10 cm2 = 100 cm2
No because the 3 sides of an equilateral triangle are equal in length
The top is also 10cm, the right is 5cm and so is the left.
10cm is a length. You can only find perimeter (length all the way round) if there is a shape!
Yes, they are.
The length of the two equal sides is not enough information to uniquely determine the length of the base.With sides of 10 cm, you can draw a triangle with anybase that's longer than zero and shorter than 20 cm.The height can be anything taller than zero and shorter than 10 cm.
A "square" is a figure that has four sides of equal length. To get its perimeter, you multiply any of the four sides by 4. If you mean a "quadrilateral" that has the stated sides, just add the sides together.
a is one of the equal sides of the iscosceles triangle b is the base perimeter is a + a + b = 46cm a = b + 5cm subsitute a for b + 5cm in the perimeter equation b + 5cm + b + 5cm + b = 46cm This simplifies down to 3b + 10cm = 46cm subtract 10cm from both sides of the equation 3b + 10cm - 10cm = 46cm - 10cm 3b = 36cm Then divide each side of the equation by 3 3b ÷ 3 = 36cm ÷ 3 b = 12cm Subsitute b back into a = b +5cm a = 12cm + 5cm a = 17cm So you have 2 sided with the length of 17cm and the base with the length of 12cm
For isosceles triangle both legs are the same, 10 cm. The hypotenuse is square root of sum of legs squared, = sqrt (10 squared + 10 squared) = 14.1 cm
No because an isosceles triangle has 2 equal sides and 2 equal interior angles with another angle and the 3 angles add up to 180 degrees
Area of square = (length of side)2 = (10cm)2 = 10*10 cm2 = 100 cm2
No because the 3 sides of an equilateral triangle are equal in length
A square with a side length of 10 cm has an area of 100 cm2
100 cm = 2* sides^2 so side length = square root of 50 cm
The top is also 10cm, the right is 5cm and so is the left.
10cm is a length. You can only find perimeter (length all the way round) if there is a shape!