No. Adjacent sides, yes. (Twice the sum)
Add up the lengths of all the sides. (Same for any shape [except a circle])
The sides are 24 metres and 36 metres.
Add together the lengths of all four sides of the parallelogram, or,add together the lengths of a pair of adjacent sides and then double the result.
If no side lengths are given, then no perimeter is defined.Even if you know all four angles in the parallelogram, it could still be drawn on thehead of a pin or on the floor of the Grand Canyon, with the same angles.But let's look on the bright side: If someone said to you "I have this parallelogram.What is its perimeter ?", then you could pick any number you want out of the blue,and he could not say that you're wrong. A parallelogram could be drawn that hasthe perimeter you gave, and matches all the numbers that he gave.
no
To find area you need base and height of a parallelogram. A = BH Not all the side lengths given would be base or height. Side lengths are perfect to find perimeter but don't rely on the side lengths for area.
No. Adjacent sides, yes. (Twice the sum)
Add up the lengths of all the sides. (Same for any shape [except a circle])
The sides are 24 metres and 36 metres.
Add together the lengths of all four sides of the parallelogram, or,add together the lengths of a pair of adjacent sides and then double the result.
If no side lengths are given, then no perimeter is defined.Even if you know all four angles in the parallelogram, it could still be drawn on thehead of a pin or on the floor of the Grand Canyon, with the same angles.But let's look on the bright side: If someone said to you "I have this parallelogram.What is its perimeter ?", then you could pick any number you want out of the blue,and he could not say that you're wrong. A parallelogram could be drawn that hasthe perimeter you gave, and matches all the numbers that he gave.
A parallelogram has 2 sets of parallel sides. The opposite sides are equal in length and opposite angles are equal. Examples of parallelograms are squares, rectangles and rhombuses. You can find the perimeter of a parallelogram by doubling the base+side length.
The perimeter is its 4 sides added together
A parallelogram has no intrinsic value. It has sides of two different lengths, diagonals of two different lengths, a perimeter, an area, two value for interior angles. The question could refer to any one of them. Furthermore, the answer would depend on what information was available.
Perimeter = The sum of the lengths of all sides of a shape
The perimeter of a triangle is the distance around it. Add the lengths of the three sides to find the perimeter.