You cannot find the perimeter unless the rectangle is a regular rectangle (a square) in which case the perimeter is 4 times the square root of the area. With just the area the shape of the rectangle could be any number of shapes with different perimeter, for example, imagine 6 square units 1cm by 1cm arranged in a 1*6 configuration to give a long thin rectangle, the perimeter would be 6+6+1+1=14cm, the same 6 arranged in a 3*2 rectangle would have the same area, but a perimeter of 3+3+2+2=10cm, for this reason a rectangle's perimeter cannot be determined from the area alone.
The perimeter of a rectangle cannot be determined with the area alone as the lengths could vary. For example, the perimeter of the rectangle could be 12 (1 and 5) or 9 (2 and 2.5). For both cases, the area is still 5cm2, but the length can still change to result in different results.
Length + width = ½ of perimeter ie 9 units. Area could be anything from 8 square units (8 x 1) to 20 square units (5 x 4), assuming there are no fractional measurements and that rectangle is not a square.
If you restrict yourself to integers, it could be 36, 60 or 164 in. If it was a square, it would have to be 36.
If you are talking about a rectangle, you can't find the area from just the perimeter. With a perimeter of say 80 units, the sides could be 10 and 30, with an area of 300 square units. But the sides could also be 5 and 35, with an area of 175 square units. There are lots of other possibilities. If you are talking about a square, that's different. Each side is a quarter of the perimeter, so the area is a quarter of the perimeter multiplied by a quarter of the perimeter.
Well, it could be any 2+ sided shapes. A square (4x5), a rectangle (2x6 then 2x4 perhaps?), or any other shape.
2(2x) +2x = 100
There is no single answer to that The rectangle could be 0.9 by 1, giving a perimeter of 2x(0.9+1)=3.8 Or it could be 0.45 by 2, giving it a perimeter of 2x(0.45+2)=4.9 The minimum perimeter is when it is a square. The square root of 0.9 is approx 0.94868, so the perimeter would be approx 3.7947
If it was a square, which is a rectangle, the perimeter would be 24 meters . But it was a regular rectangle than it could be a few things actually , one of them would be 26 meters . Another would be 40 meters I think .
You cannot find the perimeter unless the rectangle is a regular rectangle (a square) in which case the perimeter is 4 times the square root of the area. With just the area the shape of the rectangle could be any number of shapes with different perimeter, for example, imagine 6 square units 1cm by 1cm arranged in a 1*6 configuration to give a long thin rectangle, the perimeter would be 6+6+1+1=14cm, the same 6 arranged in a 3*2 rectangle would have the same area, but a perimeter of 3+3+2+2=10cm, for this reason a rectangle's perimeter cannot be determined from the area alone.
The perimeter of a rectangle cannot be determined with the area alone as the lengths could vary. For example, the perimeter of the rectangle could be 12 (1 and 5) or 9 (2 and 2.5). For both cases, the area is still 5cm2, but the length can still change to result in different results.
You can't tell. The area doesn't tell you the dimensions. There are an infinite number of different shapes with different dimensions and different perimeters that all have the same area. -- If the 575 square units of area are in the shape of a circle, then the radius of the circle is 13.53 units and the perimeter (circumference) is 85 units. (rounded) -- If the 575 square units of area are in the shape of a square, then each side of the square is 23.98 units and the perimeter is 95.92 units. (rounded) -- The 575 square units of area could also be a (23 x 25) rectangle, with perimeter of 96. -- The 575 square units of area could also be a (115 x 5) rectangle, with perimeter of 240. -- The 575 square units of area could also be a (575 x 1) rectangle, with perimeter of 1,152.
Length + width = ½ of perimeter ie 9 units. Area could be anything from 8 square units (8 x 1) to 20 square units (5 x 4), assuming there are no fractional measurements and that rectangle is not a square.
To draw a shape with a 9cm perimeter, you can create a triangle, square, or rectangle. For a triangle, you could have sides measuring 3cm, 3cm, and 3cm. For a square, all four sides would be 2.25cm. For a rectangle, two sides could be 2cm and the other two sides could be 2.5cm. These shapes will all have a perimeter of 9cm.
If you restrict yourself to integers, it could be 36, 60 or 164 in. If it was a square, it would have to be 36.
I don't think you can guess that. If it was square it would be easy. But to find a perimeter its adding up all the sides. For it to be a rectangle you have to have 2 sets of sides that are equal to each other. So a possible answer could be 10
If you are talking about a rectangle, you can't find the area from just the perimeter. With a perimeter of say 80 units, the sides could be 10 and 30, with an area of 300 square units. But the sides could also be 5 and 35, with an area of 175 square units. There are lots of other possibilities. If you are talking about a square, that's different. Each side is a quarter of the perimeter, so the area is a quarter of the perimeter multiplied by a quarter of the perimeter.