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We cannot determine the height of a trapezoid with just the lengths of the bases. Additional information such as the length of the parallel sides or any angles would be needed to calculate the height accurately.
A quadrilateral with diagonals of different lengths can be a rectangle or a kite. In a rectangle, the diagonals are equal in length, while in a kite, the diagonals are not equal and intersect at right angles. Other quadrilaterals, like trapezoids and irregular quadrilaterals, can also have diagonals of different lengths. Therefore, many quadrilaterals can fit this description, depending on their specific properties.
No. All trapezoids have only one pair of parallel sides which are different in length. In an isosceles trapezoid the lengths of the two non-parallel sides are equal.
They can be different lengths. YOU say they can be shown in different lengths but i need to know what particular lengths
The main difference between squares and trapezoids is that, while the length all four sides of a square are equal, trapezoids have two sides with equal length and two sides of different length. Also, the opposite pairs of sides in a square are parallel, while only one pair of sides in a trapezoid is parallel.
With reference to transportation , every package has three dimensions i.e length , width & height , we need to check the greatest length, greatest width & greatest height for example a machinary or a package there may be four different lengths or 4 different widths or 4 different heights over here we need to consider the greatest length or greatest width or greatest height for calculating dimensional weight also known as volumetric weight.
There are three main types of quadrilaterals: parallelograms, trapezoids, and kites. Parallelograms have opposite sides parallel and equal in length. Trapezoids have one pair of parallel sides. Kites have two pairs of adjacent sides that are equal in length.
Which side lengths? To calculate the parallel sides, you need the height of the trapezium and one of the sides, and you substitute them into the formula: h(a + b)/2, where h = height, a and b are the parallel side lengths. If you want to find the sides that are not parallel, you need the parallel sides, as well as the height of the trapezium. Then, by using Pythagoras theorem, with the side length the hypotenuse, you can find their lengths.
because a cube has 3 sides/lengths. the height. length and width.
A marker is not a specific length - different markers can have different lengths.
24 inches, surely, since the other two lengths given in the question are the height and width!
1/2*length*height = 6 length*height = 12 The factors of 12 are 1, 2, 3, 4, 6 and 12 So the length and height would be any of the above two factors that when multiplied equals 12.