Of course. A rectangle that is 5 by 5 (yes, that's a square, but a square is a rectangle) has a perimeter of 5 + 5 + 5 + 5 = 20 and an area of 5 x 5 = 25. A rectangle that is 9 by 1 also has a perimeter of 20 (= 9 + 1 + 9 + 1) but an area of 9 (= 9 x 1).
9 inches
A, 1 is a square, 2 is a rectangle
More information is needed. For the same perimeter, the area will vary, depending on whether you have a circle, a square, a rectangle with a ratio of 2:1, a rectangle with a ratio of 3:1, etc.
The answer is 2 A parallelogram that is not a square is 2. A rectangle that is not a square is 2. A square is 4. A rhombus if not a square is 2. A kite is 1. A trapezium that is not a parallelogram is 1.
An oblong is a rectangle BUT a rectangle isn't necessarily an oblong. There are 2 types of rectangle: 1) Square (equal sided) 2) Oblong (unequal sided) Most refer to an oblong as a rectangle and use the word 'square' to be more specific as it has different properties.
It means that it has a rectangular base rather than a square 1 :)
You can't calculate the perimeter from the surface area, if you don't know what figure you are talking about. For example, the answer will be different for a circle, for a square, for a rectangle with a 2:1 side ratio, for a rectangle with a 3:1 ratio, for different ellipses, for a five-pointed star, etc.
Of course. A rectangle that is 5 by 5 (yes, that's a square, but a square is a rectangle) has a perimeter of 5 + 5 + 5 + 5 = 20 and an area of 5 x 5 = 25. A rectangle that is 9 by 1 also has a perimeter of 20 (= 9 + 1 + 9 + 1) but an area of 9 (= 9 x 1).
No. There is no way you can cut one rectangle in half and only get one square. The other half would also have to be a square and this will only happen if the proportions are 1:2 and you cut the long sides.There are infinitely many ways to cut a rectangle in half none of which result in new rectangles. Only if the rectangle has proportions 1:2 can cutting it in half make a square, in fact the result could be two squares, not one.
Its length is 1+ square root of 66 ft and its width is -1+ square root of 66 ft
The Answer:Square numbers, when arranged in a square is aready a rectangle, but otherwise speaking, all square can, since all are divisible by 1 and itself, and if the square root of that perfect square is composite, it can be rearranged into a rectangle as well, in other ways.
Only 1 rectangle can be built with a Prime number of square tiles.
There is no way to compute the dimension of a rectangle from its area. 40 square inches, you see, could be 1"x40" or 2"x20", or 4"x10", or . . . . . . but they would all be 40 square inches.
A rectangle measuring 1 by 3 meters has an area of 3 square meters. 1 meter = 100 centimeters 1 square meter = 100 x 100 = 10000 square centimeters. 3 square meters = 30000 square centimeters.
The golden rectangle ratio: 1:(1 + the square root of 5) over 2 or about 1.618
You cannot find the perimeter unless the rectangle is a regular rectangle (a square) in which case the perimeter is 4 times the square root of the area. With just the area the shape of the rectangle could be any number of shapes with different perimeter, for example, imagine 6 square units 1cm by 1cm arranged in a 1*6 configuration to give a long thin rectangle, the perimeter would be 6+6+1+1=14cm, the same 6 arranged in a 3*2 rectangle would have the same area, but a perimeter of 3+3+2+2=10cm, for this reason a rectangle's perimeter cannot be determined from the area alone.