As a rectangle has two pairs of sides of equal length the other two sides must also be 8 feet and 10 feet.
How about a rectangle which is a quadrilateral with sides of different lengths
They both have 4 sides but of different lengths
By using the fact that opposite sides of a rectangle have the same length.By using the fact that opposite sides of a rectangle have the same length.By using the fact that opposite sides of a rectangle have the same length.By using the fact that opposite sides of a rectangle have the same length.
Add together the lengths of the four sides; or add the lengths of the two different sides and then double it.
a rectangle (that is NOT a square) has 4 right angles and consecutive sides of unequal lengths.
Yes.
A rectangle has four sides with two equal lengths.
Opposite sides have the same length. Other than that, you can't deduce the length of the OTHER two sides, since they can be anything.
How about a rectangle which is a quadrilateral with sides of different lengths
It is the sum of the lengths of its 4 sides
By using the fact that opposite sides of a rectangle have the same length.By using the fact that opposite sides of a rectangle have the same length.By using the fact that opposite sides of a rectangle have the same length.By using the fact that opposite sides of a rectangle have the same length.
They both have 4 sides but of different lengths
Add together the lengths of the four sides; or add the lengths of the two different sides and then double it.
add the lengths of all the sides
Opposite sides are parallel and it has a breadth and width of different lengths
a rectangle (that is NOT a square) has 4 right angles and consecutive sides of unequal lengths.
Is it not a parallelogram in which the adjacent sides are of different/unequal lengths ?