Oh, that's a happy little question! Base and width are not the same, but they are related. The base of a shape is usually the side or surface on which it rests, while the width is the measurement of how wide something is. Just remember, in the world of art and nature, every shape and measurement has its own unique beauty.
yes because the height is how tall the object is, and the base is how wide the object is, so therefor, base x height is the same thing as length x width. (answer by _mistercat_)
No
two right triangles = full rectangle That is - if you multiply height times base of a triangle, the area will be 1/2 of a rectangle having the same height, and a width the same as the triangle base.
length is how tall the shape or thing is and the width is how wide it is
Sure. The area of a parallelogram is (length of base) times (vertical height). Many pairs of numbers can have the same product, but if the (base / height) of two parallelograms are different pairs of numbers, then their shapes are different. Example: A rectangle is a parallelogram that's easy to work with. Take two rectangles: Rectangle #1: Length=6, Width=5, Area=30 Rectangle #2: Length=15, Width=2, Area=30 These rectangles certainly have different shapes. In #1, the length is 83% of the width, and in #2, the length is only 13% of the width. But they both have the same area.
gkgdctkm
They might be in some contexts but usually they are not.
yes because the height is how tall the object is, and the base is how wide the object is, so therefor, base x height is the same thing as length x width. (answer by _mistercat_)
Bredth and width are the same thing
No
You have sideways <<< Upways ^^^^ And of course width which is how wide it is. Side and width are the same thing ;). Height is the thing you x the width and the side by.
The same thing you can at every base.
Yes, the base and the length are the same thing.
length and height is the same thing it is the height from the bottom to the top of the figure and width is the measurement across and object
log base e = ln.
The same as you would calculate any other area. For example, if the base happens to be rectangular, you multiply length x width.
no