The volume of a cuboid with sides of 5 centimetres (yes, that's how to spell the word) by 6 centimetres (not cenre meters) and 7 cm is 5*6*7 = 210 cubic centimetres. If you are US, centimeters is OK but not centre meters!
210 cubic centimetres. The answer is achieved by multiplying the 5 and the 6 to get 30 square centimetres ( the area of the end face of the cuboid) and then multiplying again by the 7 to get 210 cubic centimetres. (The volume of the cuboid).
When you are measuring the volume or physical capacity.
It's called "volume", not "area".The volume is (4 x 1.3 x 1.3) = 6.76 cubic meters
Given a cuboid it is always possible to have a cylinder with the same volume.
The vol
Find the volume of a cuboid of length 7cm breath 5cm and height 6cm
Volume
An approximate volume can be calculated by assuming the classroom is a cuboid (which it nearly is, except for windows, doorposts, etc) and measuring its length, its width and its height and multiplying the three lengths together. For a more accurate value, measure the largest cuboid that would fit in the room, calculate its volume and then add on the volume of every little nook and cranny of the classroom (by measuring them and calculating their volume).
Metric measure of volume in cubic meters and gallons used in the English system.
Volume
Volume
Volume
210 cubic centimetres. The answer is achieved by multiplying the 5 and the 6 to get 30 square centimetres ( the area of the end face of the cuboid) and then multiplying again by the 7 to get 210 cubic centimetres. (The volume of the cuboid).
The volume of a cuboid is the length x width x height, so in this case the volume is 2*5*80 = 80 centimeters.
Volume = height * width * depth (front-back). 5cm * 6cm * 7cm = 210cm3.
If the dimensions of a cuboid are a, b and c, then its volume is a * b * c
When you are measuring the volume or physical capacity.