There's no way to know that.
The sides could be
1cm and 36cm
1.5cm and 24cm
1.8cm and 20cm
2cm and 18cm
2.4cm and 15cm
3cm and 12cm
3.6cm and 10cm
4cm and 9cm
4.5cm and 8cm
4.8cm and 7.5cm
5cm and 7.2cm
6cm all around
and an infinite number of other possibilities.
The area doesn't tell you the dimensions.
A square (a by a) and a rectangle (a by b) can have sides that are of equal length.
All four sides of a square are equal in length. Only the opposite sides of a rectangle are the same length. The adjacent sides are different in length.
A rectangle is a square when all four of its sides have equal length.
a rectangle is not a square by a square having parallel sides for all but the rectangle only has one pair of parallel sides * * * * * Actually, a rectangle has two pairs of parallel sides - the same as a square. Where they differ is that a rectangle has two pairs of sides of equal length, but each pair is different from the other. In a square, all four sides are of equal length.
A square has 4 equal sides. A rectangle has 2 short sides of equal length and 2 long sides of equal length
A square (a by a) and a rectangle (a by b) can have sides that are of equal length.
They are not technically the same. A square is a rectangle but a rectangle is not a square. A rectangle requires opposite sides to be the same length. A square's opposite sides are the same length so it is a rectangle. A square requires all sides to be the same length, not just opposite sides. So most rectangles are not squares.
First answer: Yes, a rectangle can be a square if all it's sides are the same length. The definition of a rectangle is "a four sided figure where opposite sides are the same length. If all sides are 4 inches, then opposite sides will be equal.Second answer:~Yes, a rectangle can be a square. ~The definition of a rectangle: a parallelogram with four sides, the sides are parallel to each other, the sides parallel to each other are the same length, there are 4 right anglesDifference between a square and a rectangle: all of the sides are the same length in a squareConclusion: a square is always a rectangle but a rectangle isn't always a square.
All four sides of a square are equal in length. Only the opposite sides of a rectangle are the same length. The adjacent sides are different in length.
A square is a rectangle because the definition of a rectangle is that it has four straight sides and the opposite sides are equal in length. Squares have four straight sides, and their opposite sides match up in length. Therefore, a square is also a rectangle.
A rectangle is a square when all four of its sides have equal length.
A square is rectangle with all its sides are equal in length. The rectangle has: (a) opposites sides are parallel. (b) opposite angles are equal
a rectangle is not a square by a square having parallel sides for all but the rectangle only has one pair of parallel sides * * * * * Actually, a rectangle has two pairs of parallel sides - the same as a square. Where they differ is that a rectangle has two pairs of sides of equal length, but each pair is different from the other. In a square, all four sides are of equal length.
A square has 4 equal sides. A rectangle has 2 short sides of equal length and 2 long sides of equal length
The sides of a square are all the same length whereas a rectangle has two pairs of sides of equal length.
A square is a rectangle, but a rectangle isn't necessarily a square. A square can be thought of as a "special" rectangle, where all sides are equal. The similarity is that all rectangles have 4 angles each of 90o However a Square has 4 sides equal length while a Rectangle has 4 sides with opposite sides of equal length. The clever observer will note that the adjacent sides of a square are equal while the adjacent sides of a rectangle may or may not be equal. yes it is
They both have 4 sides, a square can be a rectangle but a rectangle can't be a square since the sides aren't all the same length