It could be 1 x 10.
It is 1+4+1+4 = 10 inches.
The perimeter is: 1+10+1+10 = 22 cm
Yes. For instance, the rectangle measuring 1 by 10 has a perimeter of 22 and an area of 10, whereas the rectangle measuring 4 by 4 has a perimeter of 16 and an area of 16.
1 4th of a rectangle is 1 quarter of a rectangle
It could be 1 x 10.
It is 1+4+1+4 = 10 inches.
It is 1+4+1+4 = 10 inches.
The perimeter is: 1+10+1+10 = 22 cm
Yes. For instance, the rectangle measuring 1 by 10 has a perimeter of 22 and an area of 10, whereas the rectangle measuring 4 by 4 has a perimeter of 16 and an area of 16.
The area of rectangle is : 100.0
1 4th of a rectangle is 1 quarter of a rectangle
(4 + 1) × 2 = 10 metres
(4 + 1) × 2 = 10 metres
yes tkae a rectangle that has length 499,999+((9.9999999999*10^11)/1*10^12) and width 1*10^-12 its perimeter is exactly 1million miles but its area is about 5*10^-7 square miles
10 metre x 10 cm = 1 square metre
This question has no unique answer. A (3 x 2) rectangle has a perimeter = 10, its area = 6 A (4 x 1) rectangle also has a perimeter = 10, but its area = 4 A (4.5 x 0.5) rectangle also has a perimeter = 10, but its area = 2.25. The greatest possible area for a rectangle with perimeter=10 occurs if the rectangle is a square, with all sides = 2.5. Then the area = 6.25. You can keep the same perimeter = 10 and make the area anything you want between zero and 6.25, by picking different lengths and widths, just as long as (length+width)=5.