The perimeter of a polygon is the distance around the outside of the polygon. A polygon is 2-dimensional; however, perimeter is 1-dimensional and is measured in linear units.
To find the perimeter of a polygon, take the sum of the length of each side.
I can not tell you. It is because i do not know what shape the polygon is. You must tell me that first.
You can't solve the question. If it is a regular polygon of n sides, then the length of each side would be 48cm/n. However, the only givens are that the figure is a polygon and that the perimeter is 48cm.
Yes it is because the perimeter describe the outside of the figure, when also the circumference describe the outside of the circle.
perimeter is the measure around the figure; area is the measure within the figure formula: perimeter: length+length+width+width=perimeter (for square or rectangle) area: length times width= area ( for square or rectangle)
If the figure is a polygon ... with sides made of straight line segments ... then the perimeter is the sum of the lengths of all the sides. If part or all of the figure's boundary consists of curves, the perimeter is still the distance all around the figure, but you may need special formulas to find the lengths of the curved sections.
I can not tell you. It is because i do not know what shape the polygon is. You must tell me that first.
A pentagon, which is a 5-sided figure, will have a perimeter equal to the sum of the lengths of all the sides. This will be true for any polygon; the perimeter of any polygon is the sum of the lengths of all the sides. If the pentagon is a regular pentagon, then the perimeter will be 5 times the length of one of the sides. For any regular polygon, the perimeter will be the length of one side times the number of sides in that polygon.
The distance around a figure. For a polygon, add the lengths of all of its sides to get the perimeter.
That's because "perimeter" means the distance around something - not the spaces inside. If you count squares inside a figure, you are finding the AREA, not the PERIMETER.
You can't solve the question. If it is a regular polygon of n sides, then the length of each side would be 48cm/n. However, the only givens are that the figure is a polygon and that the perimeter is 48cm.
Yes it is because the perimeter describe the outside of the figure, when also the circumference describe the outside of the circle.
perimeter is the measure around the figure; area is the measure within the figure formula: perimeter: length+length+width+width=perimeter (for square or rectangle) area: length times width= area ( for square or rectangle)
Distance around an object. Just add up all of the measurements of a shape.
A polygon is a closed plane figure that is bound by at least three straight sides. Perimeter is the total lengths of the sides of a shape. They are different because a polygon refers to the shape, and perimeter refers to the distance around a shape. The perimeter refers to the path traveled around the outside of some area. All polygons have a perimeter. Shapes that are not polygons also have a perimeter -- such as circles, semicircles, and the shapes of most letters.
If the figure is a polygon ... with sides made of straight line segments ... then the perimeter is the sum of the lengths of all the sides. If part or all of the figure's boundary consists of curves, the perimeter is still the distance all around the figure, but you may need special formulas to find the lengths of the curved sections.
You need to specify the perimeter of what figure. Overall, it is the sum of every side measurement of a polygon. For a circle it would be 2 times pi times the radius.
well, it depends on WHAT polygon that you are talking about. For example, if the figure that you were talking about was a square, then the perimeter would be sqrt20 = one side length 8sqrt5= perimeter of square and so on and so forth...