It is not possible to calculate weight just from length, width and/or height. (These can give you volume and area, but not weight). For weight, you need to know "how heavy it is per this amount of stuff" is - e.g "3 grams per square cm" or "6 tonnes per inch".
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Well, isn't that just a happy little question! To calculate weight when you have the length, width, and height, you can use the formula Weight = Length x Width x Height x Density. It's like mixing colors on your palette - just follow the steps gently and you'll find the answer blooming before your eyes. Remember, there are no mistakes, just happy little accidents in math!
There is no direct relationship between the volume (length*breadth*height) and weight. A given volume of air and the same volume of lead will have ver different weights.
You can either use some weighing scales to measure it, or calculate the weight by using the density of the substance that makes up the object:weight = density x volume= density x length x width x height.
Length will equal the volume divided by the other two numbers.
length times with times height
If you're only given the base, then you can't calculate the other leg. If you have any one of the following, then you can calculate all of the parts of the triangle: -- length of the other leg -- length of the hypotenuse -- size of either acute angle