dimensions
All solid figures have length, width and height and, conversely, if a figure has length, width and height then it is a solid figure.
The area of a parallelogram is the base times the height; the height must be measured perpendicular to the base. If you correctly measure the height perpendicular to the base and you get different measurements, then you are NOT dealing with a parallelogram.
Squares don't have volume, they have area. The figures you give describe a volume of 1 cubic foot.
It is usually a linear measure in the vertical direction, measured downwards. If measured upwards, the same measure could be called a height.
Length is one of the dimensions. Length, width, height etc. which can describe an object are called its dimensions.
Collectively they are called a continuos variable
Shapes which can be measured in 3 directions are called three-dimensional shapes. These shapes are also called solids. Length, width, and height (or depth or thickness) are the three measurements of the three-dimensional shapes. These are the part of three-dimensional geometry.
Height and breadth are measurements used to describe the size of an object. Height refers to the distance from the top to the bottom of an object, while breadth typically refers to the width or thickness of an object. These measurements are important in fields such as architecture, engineering, and design to ensure proper proportions and dimensions are maintained.
Two dimensional (2-D) figures and three dimensional (3-D) figures are measurements of space. 2-D measure area which is the amount of space on a flat object. 3-D measures the amount of volume which is the amount of space inside an object. 2-D is a measurement of length and height 3-D is a measurement of length and height and depth The similarities of these measurements is that they both measure the length and height, but 3-D just goes a little further in measuring how deep an object is.
You should use whichever measurements your characters would use!
All solid figures have length, width and height and, conversely, if a figure has length, width and height then it is a solid figure.
The area of a parallelogram is the base times the height; the height must be measured perpendicular to the base. If you correctly measure the height perpendicular to the base and you get different measurements, then you are NOT dealing with a parallelogram.
Squares don't have volume, they have area. The figures you give describe a volume of 1 cubic foot.
Latitude and Longitude
Plane figures are those that have a length and width but no height. they are two dimensional or flat.
describe how the height of the tides changes from monday to thursday
It is usually a linear measure in the vertical direction, measured downwards. If measured upwards, the same measure could be called a height.