2 points
you cant.
Squares are rectangles. Draw a 2 unit square.
Such diagrams are known as "magic squares." It will be difficult to draw one in this format. Here's one that adds up to fifteen -- horizontally, vertically and diagonally. 8\1\6 3\5\7 4\9\2
Draw a rectangle made with three squares. Then put a diagonal line through the center one. Tah-Dah
Draw a rectangle in the ratio of 1:2 eg sides of 5cm & 10cm. Bisect both the longer sides and join their mid points with a straight line. Draw a diagonal. This gives you 2 squares, 2 big triangles and 2 small triangle (1 in each square)
Draw a regular 4 sided square then in the bottom right corner add two lines which creates 2 squares. If that's not right I don't know what is.
2 points
you cant.
Squares are rectangles. Draw a 2 unit square.
\ / \ / \/ /\ / \ \ / /\ / \ / \
Oh, dude, you're really asking me to count squares now? Okay, so in a 5x5 grid, there are 25 individual squares of various sizes. You've got your big squares, your medium squares, your tiny squares... it's a whole square party in there. So, like, 25 squares, man.
Such diagrams are known as "magic squares." It will be difficult to draw one in this format. Here's one that adds up to fifteen -- horizontally, vertically and diagonally. 8\1\6 3\5\7 4\9\2
I would draw two open pizza boxes that did contain eight-slice pizzas, and show that five slices are gone from one of the pizzas.
Draw a rectangle made with three squares. Then put a diagonal line through the center one. Tah-Dah
The answer would be zero. 9^2 -9^2 would be zero.
Its slightly different to other ball games however this is how points are acheived. 4 points for a win. 2 points for a draw. 1 "bonus" point for scoring 4 tries (or more). 1 "bonus" point for losing by 7 points (or fewer).