28 = 4 x 7. Job done unless it's a triangle.
The dimensions are: altitude 12 inches and base 7 inches Check: 0.5*12*7 = 42 square inches
The length of the longer leg of a right triangle is 3ftmore than three times the length of the shorter leg. The length of the hypotenuse is 4ftmore than three times the length of the shorter leg. Find the side lengths of the triangle.
Length = 20 m and width = 9 m
The length of the rectangle is 27 meters and the width is 19 meters.
Any length greater than 3 inches.
This is not solvable in integers for a triangle. The solution to the nearest thousandth is: base = 9.132 and altitude = 6.132 Half base = 4.566 x alt 6.132 = 27.999, again to the nearest thousandth.
12
The area of a parallelogram is the length of the 'base' times the altitude. In a rectangle, which is a special case of parallelogram, the altitude is maximum length and also is equal in length to the other side.
Information about the base length is not enough to determine the lengths of the legs other than that they must be more than 5 units.
Yes, the slant height of a regular square pyramid is longer than its altitude. The altitude is the perpendicular height from the apex to the center of the base, while the slant height is the distance from the apex to the midpoint of a side of the base. In a right triangle formed by the altitude, half the base side, and the slant height, the slant height serves as the hypotenuse, making it inherently longer than the altitude.
The dimensions are: altitude 12 inches and base 7 inches Check: 0.5*12*7 = 42 square inches
the length of each leg is more than 4.. the answer would be 22.5
If the base of a triangle is 12, then the other two sides can be any length at all, just as long as they add up to more than 12. If they're congruent, then each one can be anything at all more than 6.
The base length of a parallelogram is larger than its width or its side.
For the equilateral triangle in Euclidean space(i.e, the triangles you see in general) median is the same as its altitude. So, both are of equal length.
Call the base "x", then the height would be "x+6". Now, use Pythagoras' formula to calculate the hypotenuse. Without more information, you can't know the specific length of the hypothenuse - only its relationship to the base (or to the height).
Cloud base refers to the altitude above the ground at which the lowest portion of a cloud is observed. Cloud ceiling, on the other hand, is the height above the ground of the lowest cloud layer covering more than half of the sky. Cloud base is the specific altitude at which a cloud starts, while cloud ceiling is the overall height of the lowest cloud layer in the sky.