A rectangle will always be a parallelogram.
A 5 x 7 rectangle
That depends what kind of figure you are talking about. The formula for the area of a circle is quite different from the area of a rectangle, for example.That depends what kind of figure you are talking about. The formula for the area of a circle is quite different from the area of a rectangle, for example.That depends what kind of figure you are talking about. The formula for the area of a circle is quite different from the area of a rectangle, for example.That depends what kind of figure you are talking about. The formula for the area of a circle is quite different from the area of a rectangle, for example.
A rectangle
Simple the Perimeter you just add the outside numbers. For area. When I look at an octagon I see a rectangle and two Trapezoids on either side of the rectangle. So find the area of each object then add the areas up and voila you got the area of a rectangle.
It would be a rectangle. The lengths of the sides must be such that the length times the width equals 36: So it could be a square with sides 6; or A rectangle with sides 4 and 9; or A rectangle with sides 3 and 13; or A rectangle with sides 2 and 18; or A rectangle with sides 1 and 36; or A rectangle with sides ½ and 72, etc The rectangle can get as thin as you like and would become longer to accommodate the area.
A rectangle will always be a parallelogram.
I think you mean parallelogram. Parallelogram look like a rectangle but it looks slanted rectangle. __________________ /_________________/ ^^that is parallelogram ^^
A 5 x 7 rectangle
That depends what kind of figure you are talking about. The formula for the area of a circle is quite different from the area of a rectangle, for example.That depends what kind of figure you are talking about. The formula for the area of a circle is quite different from the area of a rectangle, for example.That depends what kind of figure you are talking about. The formula for the area of a circle is quite different from the area of a rectangle, for example.That depends what kind of figure you are talking about. The formula for the area of a circle is quite different from the area of a rectangle, for example.
square circle rectangle diamond
It depends on what the shaded and non-shaded parts look like!
a rectangle
A rectangle.
A rectangle.
A rectangle
Let's take a look at this problem.Rectangle Perimeter = 2(l + w)Rectangle Perimeter =? 2(2l + 2w)Rectangle Perimeter =? (2)(2)(l + w)2(Rectangle Perimeter) = 2[2(l + w)]Thus, we can say that the perimeter of a rectangle is doubled when its dimensions are doubled.Rectangle Area = lwRectangle Area =? (2l)(2w)Rectangle Area =? 4lw4(Rectangle Area) = 4lwThus, we can say that the area of a rectangle is quadruplicated when its dimensions are doubled.