It is 182 cm.
The perimeter.
You could have an isosceles triangle with sides 3, 3, and 2. I think that's the only one.
The perimeter is doubled.
perimeter is the sum of all sides.
There is only one equilateral triangle with a perimeter of 60 units. Its side lengths are integers.
It is 182 cm.
The perimeter.
You could have an isosceles triangle with sides 3, 3, and 2. I think that's the only one.
Both the side lengths and the perimeter are linear measurements, therefore they are proportional. In other words, twice the side length results in twice the perimeter.
The perimeter is doubled.
Side length x 6 = perimeter
Lengths of: equal side+equal side+base = perimeter
perimeter is the sum of all sides.
The perimeter is 26 units.
rectangles have 2 sets of parellel sides but 2 different pairs of side lengths
Yes, I could draw three rectangles with 12 units, so long as the perimeter of the rectangles sum up to 12. You're probably asking for integer lengths, though. A square is a special type of rectangle where all the sides are the same length, so I could have 3 squares with a side length of 1 unit, which gives 3x(1x4)=12 units.