Oh, dude, you can draw like infinite parallelograms with an area of 24 square units. As long as the base and height multiply to 24, you're good to go. So, like, go wild with those parallelograms, man.
Well, honey, to draw three different parallelograms with 18 square units, you can have one with a base of 6 units and a height of 3 units, another with a base of 9 units and a height of 2 units, and the last one with a base of 18 units and a height of 1 unit. Just make sure those sides are parallel and you're good to go, darling.
YES From your start point draw a line 5 units up, from this point draw a line 5 units across, from this point draw a line 5 units down, from this point draw a line 5 units back to the start. You have drawn a square with a total perimeter length of 20 units and a area of 25 square units.
You can draw a square of area 2 cm approximately.By considering the side as 1.4 unitsBecause area of square is a2 and to have the area as 2 sq. units you have to consider the side of square as square root of 2 (1.41421 35623 73095 04880 16887 24209 69807 85696 71875 37694 80731 76679 73799) which is nearly impossible.
To draw a shape with an area measured in square units and a perimeter of 7 units, you would need to create a rectangle with dimensions that satisfy these conditions. One possible option is a rectangle with dimensions of 1 unit by 2 units, which would have an area of 2 square units and a perimeter of 6 units. To achieve a perimeter of 7 units, you could slightly adjust the dimensions to 1.5 units by 2 units, resulting in an area of 3 square units and a perimeter of 7 units.
Draw the table and calculate the area of the triangle the area of a square is 36
No, but you can draw a parallelogram that is not a square. All squares are parallelograms, but only some parallelograms are squares.
Squares are rectangles. Draw a 2 unit square.
Well, honey, to draw three different parallelograms with 18 square units, you can have one with a base of 6 units and a height of 3 units, another with a base of 9 units and a height of 2 units, and the last one with a base of 18 units and a height of 1 unit. Just make sure those sides are parallel and you're good to go, darling.
yes
Yes
Of course. Most parallelograms are not squares.
YES From your start point draw a line 5 units up, from this point draw a line 5 units across, from this point draw a line 5 units down, from this point draw a line 5 units back to the start. You have drawn a square with a total perimeter length of 20 units and a area of 25 square units.
the answer is jermil warren with a thing :)
The rectangle is in fact a square with 4 equal sides of 5 units in length.
Yes, you can. If you make it 1 unit by 5 units
You can't without having incomplete units.
A square can be as big as you wish to draw it. And a square would be measured in square units, not linear units.