To find the perimeter of two-dimensional shapes, add the lengths of all the sides together. The sum is the perimeter of the figure.
Yes all shapes have perimeters.
Perimeter is a concept that really makes sense in the context of 2-dimensional shapes. Furthermore, kitchens can be of all sorts of shapes.
No, because there are an infinite number of such shapes. In fact, there are an infinite number of triangles with a perimeter of 12 cm.
Any shape at all can have any perimeter at all.
A polygon is a closed plane figure that is bound by at least three straight sides. Perimeter is the total lengths of the sides of a shape. They are different because a polygon refers to the shape, and perimeter refers to the distance around a shape. The perimeter refers to the path traveled around the outside of some area. All polygons have a perimeter. Shapes that are not polygons also have a perimeter -- such as circles, semicircles, and the shapes of most letters.
it means make same shapes only perimeter
All shapes have areas that are in square units so there is nothing you need do there. So all you need is a closed shape with a perimeter of 7 units. All shapes have areas that are in square units so there is nothing you need do there. So all you need is a closed shape with a perimeter of 7 units. All shapes have areas that are in square units so there is nothing you need do there. So all you need is a closed shape with a perimeter of 7 units. All shapes have areas that are in square units so there is nothing you need do there. So all you need is a closed shape with a perimeter of 7 units.
With some effort. You find the perimeter of each relevant section and add them all together.
You can't. The perimeter doesn't tell the area. There are an infinite number of shapes with different dimensions and different areas that all have the same perimeter.
You can't. The perimeter doesn't tell the area. There are an infinite number of shapes with different dimensions and different areas that all have the same perimeter.
The area doesn't tell you the perimeter. There are an infinite number of shapes and sizes, all with different dimensions and perimeters but the same area.