Area = Base x Height
A = B x H
To find the area of a parallelogram, you can use the formula: Area = base × height. If you have the measurements for the base and the perpendicular height, simply multiply those values together. If you provide specific dimensions for parallelogram LMNO, I can help calculate the area.
Hopefully you've been given the parallelogram's area. If so you can use the following formula: Area of parallelogram = base length x altitude therefore altitude = area of parallelogram (divided by) base length
There is no exact formula to find the area of a parallelogram * * * * * It all depends on what information you do have. If you know the base length, B, and the vertical height, H, then the area is B*H square units. If you don't know H but know an angle then some trigonometry will enable you to find H.
They both use perpendicular height and are in square units. Area of a trapezoid = 0.5*(sum of parallel sides)*perpendicular height Area of a parallelogram = base*perpendicular height
To find the area of a trapezoid using the area of a corresponding parallelogram, you can draw a line parallel to one of the bases of the trapezoid that extends to form a parallelogram. The area of the parallelogram is calculated using the formula (A = \text{base} \times \text{height}). Since the trapezoid shares the same height and one pair of parallel sides with the parallelogram, you can find the area of the trapezoid by subtracting the area of the triangular sections outside the trapezoid from the area of the parallelogram. This approach effectively utilizes the relationship between the two shapes to derive the trapezoid's area.
Hopefully you've been given the parallelogram's area. If so you can use the following formula: Area of parallelogram = base length x altitude therefore altitude = area of parallelogram (divided by) base length
There is no exact formula to find the area of a parallelogram * * * * * It all depends on what information you do have. If you know the base length, B, and the vertical height, H, then the area is B*H square units. If you don't know H but know an angle then some trigonometry will enable you to find H.
They both use perpendicular height and are in square units. Area of a trapezoid = 0.5*(sum of parallel sides)*perpendicular height Area of a parallelogram = base*perpendicular height
Well, darling, to find the base of a parallelogram, you use the formula area = base x height. Since the area is 36 cm square and the height is 4.5 cm, you plug those in and solve for the base. So, the base of this sassy parallelogram is 8 cm.
They both use perpendicular height and are in square units. Area of a trapezoid = 0.5*(sum of parallel sides)*perpendicular height Area of a parallelogram = base*perpendicular height
If you have the lengths of the two sides and a diagonal, then you can use Heron's formula to find the area of one triangle and double it for the area of the parallelogram.If you have two sides and an angle, then area = a*b*sin(C).
If the base is a rectangle, use the formula for the area of a rectangle.
For simplicity, let's call the breadth 'L' and the height 'W'. The formula is A = LxW. We can use X to represent W (the height) and 2X to represent L (the breadth, which is doubled the height) and substitute into the formula: A = X times 2X. The area of the parallelogram mentioned would be 2X².
Use Heron's Formula
Well, isn't that a happy little problem to solve! To find the base of the parallelogram window, we can use the formula for the area of a parallelogram, which is base times height. Since we know the area is 18 1/3 square feet and the height is 3 1/3 feet, we can divide the area by the height to find the length of the base. Happy painting!
I can use it when lines are joined together
leanth times width