the answer is 12
It depends what units you use for each side ! A 1cm x 15cm rectangle has a perimeter of 16cm. So does a 2cm x 4cm one ! If you start using millimetres, there are many more possibilities !
If the rectangle has a width of x inches, and a length of x + 16 inches, then its perimeter equals to 2x + 2x + 32 or 4x + 32. If x = 14, then x + 16 = 30. So the perimeter of rectangle becomes 2(14) + 2(30) = 28 + 60 = 88 inches.
Factors of 36 are 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 9, 12, 18, and 36. So, there are 5 rectangles with an area of 36 cm^2 is 5.
You can't tell the area from knowing the perimeter. There are an infinite number of different rectangles, all with the same perimeter, that all have different areas. Here are a few rectangles that all have perimeters of 42. The last number after each one is its area: 1 cm by 20 cm . . . . . 20 square centimeters 2 x 19 . . . . . 38 3 x 18 . . . . . 54 4 x 17 . . . . . 68 5 x 16 . . . . . 80 10 x 11 . . . 110
Perimeter of [ 16 x 26 ] rectangle = 16 + 16 + 26 + 26 = 84-ft . Perimeter of a 20-ft square = 4 x 20 = 80-ft . The rectangle has the greater perimeter.
Yes. Say there are two rectangles, both with perimeter of 20. One of the rectangles is a 2 by 8 rectangle. The area of this rectangle is 2 x 8 which is 16. The other rectangle is a 4 by 6 rectangle. It has an area of 4 x 6 which is 24.
* It is unclear if the question is asking about two rectangles, each with a perimeter of 16, or two rectangles whose perimeters sum to 16. This answer assumes the former.Other than the 4x4 square, which coincidentally has both a perimeter and area of 16, some examples would be:1 x 7 rectangle : perimeter 16 in. , area 7 sq. in2 x 6 rectangle : perimeter 16 in., area 12 sq. in3 x 5 rectangle: perimeter 16 in., area 15 sq. inYou can calculate that for a given perimeter, the largest area is found in the square with a side measurement of P/4, i.e. the length and the width are the same.
A square with 4-inch sides, an octagon with 2-inch sides, several rectangles...
It depends what units you use for each side ! A 1cm x 15cm rectangle has a perimeter of 16cm. So does a 2cm x 4cm one ! If you start using millimetres, there are many more possibilities !
Let's restrict ourselves to integers. 1 x 17 2 x 16 3 x 15 4 x 14 5 x 13 6 x 12 7 x 11 8 x 10 9 x 9 9 rectangles, 9 x 9 is the greatest area
The perimeter is 60 inches
16
Infinite in number, from a 4 x 4 square to 0.0000001 x 7.9999999 etc
1, 19 2, 18 3, 17 4, 16 5, 15 6, 14 7, 13 8, 12 9, 11 10,10 (a square)
No, it is not. I'll give you two examples of a rectangle with a perimeter of 1. The first rectangle has dimensions of 1/4x1/4. The area is 1/16. The second rectangle has dimensions of 3/8x1/8. The area is 3/64. You can clearly see that these two rectangles have the same perimeter, yet the area is different.
for perimeter, just add all the side lengths 16+16+14+14=60 inches
If two similar rectangles have the widths 16m and 14cm what is the ratio of the perimiters?