The length in centimetres multiplied by the width in centimetres will give you the area in square centimetres.
If the area is 25 centimetres, then the length of a single side will be sqrt(25) = 5 centimetres.
If a square has a side length of 4 centimetres, then its area is equal to 4 x 4 = 16cm2 (16 square centimetres).If a square has a side length of 8 centimetres, then its area is equal to 8 x 8 = 64cm2 (64 square centimetres).Therefore, by doubling the side length of a square, the squares area quadruples.
Area of a square is equal to the square of its side. Thus the square root of 48 square cm which is 6.93 cm is the measure of the length of the side.
A perimeter is a measure of length and so cannot be 16 square centimetres - which is a measure of area. As it happens, a square with a perimeter of 16 centimetres will have sides of 4 cm and so an area of 16 square centimetres.
The length in centimetres multiplied by the width in centimetres will give you the area in square centimetres.
If the area is 25 centimetres, then the length of a single side will be sqrt(25) = 5 centimetres.
If a square has a side length of 4 centimetres, then its area is equal to 4 x 4 = 16cm2 (16 square centimetres).If a square has a side length of 8 centimetres, then its area is equal to 8 x 8 = 64cm2 (64 square centimetres).Therefore, by doubling the side length of a square, the squares area quadruples.
Area of a square is equal to the square of its side. Thus the square root of 48 square cm which is 6.93 cm is the measure of the length of the side.
A perimeter is a measure of length and so cannot be 16 square centimetres - which is a measure of area. As it happens, a square with a perimeter of 16 centimetres will have sides of 4 cm and so an area of 16 square centimetres.
A square with side length 4 centimetres has an area of 4 x 4 = 16 cm2 (16 square centimetres).
173 centimetres is a length, not an area
Area is measured in square centimetres, so a square with an area of 1600 cm cannot exist.
Area = 3.5*3.5 = 12.25 square cm
The answer depends on the variables of length times width. For example, a rectangle of 10 centimetres by 5 centimetres : 10 x 5 = 50 square centimetres.
The area of square is : 100.0
Square centimetres