1 x 5
2 x 4
3 x 3
area = 144 square units perimeter = 48 units
There are three possibilities.. 1 x 12... 2 x 6 & 3 x 4
Perimeter = 2 x (width + length)⇒ 12 = 2 x (width + length)⇒ width + length = 6⇒ the rectangles could be:1 by 52 by 43 by 3[A square is a rectangle with equal sides.]
Squares are rectangles. Draw a 2 unit square.
There are an infinite number of rectangles with this perimeter. The "whole number" sides could be (5 x 1), (4 x 2) or (3 x 3), but (5½ x ½) or (3¼ x 2¾) etc would fit the description.
1 unit x 5 units2 units x 4 units3 units x 3 units
area = 144 square units perimeter = 48 units
3.1 and 2.9 units 3.2 and 2.8 units 3.3 and 2.7 units etc or 3.01 and 2.99 units 3.02 and 2.98 units 3.03 and 2.97 units etc. All you need to do is to have two different postitve numbers that sum to 6 (half of 12)
There are three possibilities.. 1 x 12... 2 x 6 & 3 x 4
Perimeter = 2 x (width + length)⇒ 12 = 2 x (width + length)⇒ width + length = 6⇒ the rectangles could be:1 by 52 by 43 by 3[A square is a rectangle with equal sides.]
Squares are rectangles. Draw a 2 unit square.
There are an infinite number of rectangles with this perimeter. The "whole number" sides could be (5 x 1), (4 x 2) or (3 x 3), but (5½ x ½) or (3¼ x 2¾) etc would fit the description.
If you restrict yourself to whole numbers, the perimeter is 120 units.
Yes, I could draw three rectangles with 12 units, so long as the perimeter of the rectangles sum up to 12. You're probably asking for integer lengths, though. A square is a special type of rectangle where all the sides are the same length, so I could have 3 squares with a side length of 1 unit, which gives 3x(1x4)=12 units.
No. One length could be 3 and the others three of a triangle. The total perimeter is 9 units, which is an odd number.
Thee different rectangles with an area of 12 square units are 3 by 4, 2 by 6 and 1 by 12.
Rectangles with a perimeter of 20 units can have various dimensions, as long as the sum of the lengths of all four sides equals 20 units. One example could be a rectangle with sides measuring 4 units by 6 units, as 4 + 4 + 6 + 6 = 20. Another example could be a square with sides measuring 5 units each, as 5 + 5 + 5 + 5 = 20. In general, rectangles with sides of any length that add up to 20 units can have a perimeter of 20 units.