The answer is a point, the other person is correct.
plane
Plane
No, length times width is not the same as base times height. In geometry, length times width typically refers to the area of a two-dimensional shape, such as a rectangle. On the other hand, base times height is commonly used to find the area of a triangle or a parallelogram. The formulas for calculating area differ depending on the shape being measured.
A cube!!
False on two counts. A rectangular shape is 2-dimensional and so can have no mass. If it is rectangular but has length, width and height then it is a cuboid object. Then, multiplying the length width and height will give the volume, not the mass.
plane
A Point
If volume can be provided then by using width, and height length can be found
Plane
3D
Cube
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
A solid is a 3 dimensional object having length, width and height. Its volume measured in cubic units is length*width*height
Geometry is a branch of mathematics that deals with the size, shape, and relative position of physical elements. Geometry also deals with the properties of space. Geometry looks at the length, width, height, and space of an object.
A rectangle is a two dimensional object: height, width and length are three dimensions.
To find the width of a volume using only the length and height, you would need to know the formula for the volume of the object. If the object is a rectangular prism, the formula for volume is length x width x height. If you know the length and height, you can rearrange the formula to solve for the width: width = volume / (length x height). This will give you the width of the volume based on the provided length and height.
Length (breadth, width or height are also used).Length (breadth, width or height are also used).Length (breadth, width or height are also used).Length (breadth, width or height are also used).