Yes
Squares are rectangles. Draw a 2 unit square.
A right-angle triangle is half of a square or rectangle. Draw a square or rectangle and draw a line from one corner to the corner diagonally opposite. You now have two triangles of the same area.
yes
Draw a right angled triangle with legs of lengths 2 and 3 units. The hypotenuse will be sqrt(13) units.
Yes
You can't without having incomplete units.
Squares are rectangles. Draw a 2 unit square.
A right-angle triangle is half of a square or rectangle. Draw a square or rectangle and draw a line from one corner to the corner diagonally opposite. You now have two triangles of the same area.
yes
Draw a straight line AB of any length x. Draw another line, parallel to AB and at a distance of 2*24/x units from it. Select any point on the second line and call that point C. Join AC and BC. Then triangle ABC will have an area of 24 square units.
YES From your start point draw a line 5 units up, from this point draw a line 5 units across, from this point draw a line 5 units down, from this point draw a line 5 units back to the start. You have drawn a square with a total perimeter length of 20 units and a area of 25 square units.
Draw a right angled triangle with legs of lengths 2 and 3 units. The hypotenuse will be sqrt(13) units.
There are many different triangles that have an area of three square inches, here's one way to draw one: Draw a rectangle whose area is six square inches (or imagine what one's dimensions would be, e.g. 6x1 or 3x2) and cut it in half diagonally to make a right triangle that has an area of three square inches.
the answer is jermil warren with a thing :)
The rectangle is in fact a square with 4 equal sides of 5 units in length.
Right triange with both sides around the 90 degrees = 4 with a right trianle the area = 1/2 * height * width (think of it as half a rectangle)