It is not.
The perimeter of a 1 cm square is 4 cm.
The perimeter of a 5 km * 15 km rectangle is 4000000 cm: a million times as large!
Any length greater than 1 mile. The area of a rectangle is not sufficient to determine its perimeter.
To answer this simply try a few out for yourself. In a 2x1 cm rectangle, the area is 2 cm squared and the perimeter is 6 cm In a 12x10 rectangle, the area is 120 cm squared and the perimeter is 44 cm. In some cases, the perimeter is larger and in others it is smaller. To answer your question, no, the perimeter of a rectangle is NOT always greater than its area.
The perimeter can have any value greater than 1008.1 feet
Perimeter of a rectangle is 2(l+b).Area of rectangle is 216 centimeter square.
If it was a square, which is a rectangle, the perimeter would be 24 meters . But it was a regular rectangle than it could be a few things actually , one of them would be 26 meters . Another would be 40 meters I think .
Sometimes. Experiment with a small square and with a large square (though any shape rectangle will do). A square of 4 x 4 has a perimeter of 16, and an area of 16. A smaller square has more perimeter than area. A larger square has more area than perimeter.
Of course, a rectangle can have a greater perimeter and a greater area. Simply double all the sides: the perimeter is doubled and the area is quadrupled - both bigger than they were.
Any area you like greater than 0 square units, and less than or equal to 182.25 square units.
Anything greater than 27.713cm (4 x √48).
yes it can; a rectangle 5 by 2 has perimeter 14 and area 10 for example; a rectangle 10 by 2 has perimeter 24 and area 20, both greater.
Conventionally, any fraction greater than a quarter.
Assuming that the fact that it is a rectangle means that it cannot be a square, then it can have any value in the interval (0, 20.25) square units. This depends on whether the rectangle is a long thin shape or a near-square.
Any length greater than 1 mile. The area of a rectangle is not sufficient to determine its perimeter.
To answer this simply try a few out for yourself. In a 2x1 cm rectangle, the area is 2 cm squared and the perimeter is 6 cm In a 12x10 rectangle, the area is 120 cm squared and the perimeter is 44 cm. In some cases, the perimeter is larger and in others it is smaller. To answer your question, no, the perimeter of a rectangle is NOT always greater than its area.
The perimeter can have any value greater than 1008.1 feet
5x> 4
6x5