No think about it like this look at a square on a sheet of graphing paper. One square has 4 sides so its perimeter is 4 units
Either. The perimeter of a square with area 1 square unit is 4, a rational value. The perimeter of a square with area 2 square unit is 4*sqrt(2), an irrational value.
If 40 is the measure of one side, the perimeter is 160.
A nine-unit square has a perimeter of 36 units.
A 20-unit square has a perimeter of 80 units.
24
If a square has an area of 1 square unit then its sides are of length 1 unit. Consequently, its perimeter is 4*1 = 4 units.
It is: perimeter/4 = length of one side of the square
Assuming each square is one square unit, if you put them all in a line, the perimeter ends up being 10 units. ______ l_l_l_l_l
The area of any shape should be in SQUARE unit, and not only unit. So the question is wrong!
Perimeter of a square = 4 sides Answer: 1 side = 25% of the Perimeter
-- The perimeter of the square is [4 times the length of one side] . -- The length of one side of the square is [square root of its area] .
Perimeter of a square = 4 x (length of any one side)