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If the area is one square meter, the side length is one meter. Therefore, the perimeter is four meters.
The outer boundary of the square meter area - the "edge".
8*8 = 64 square meters
Perimeter of the base of the ruler multiplied by its height
The perimeter is 82 meters.
If the area is one square meter, the side length is one meter. Therefore, the perimeter is four meters.
What do you mean by a "10.920 meter area"? A meter is a measure of length, which cannot be used to define an area UNLESS it is qualified in some way. eg is your area 10.920 meters across in all directions, ie it is a circle with a diameter of 10.920 meters? eg Is your area surrounded by a 10.920 meter long fence which encloses the area; ie the perimeter of the area is 10.920 meters - even this is incomplete as there are many different shapes with different areas which ALL have a perimeter of 10.920 meters (the largest area is when the shape is a circle and the 10.920 meters is the perimeter of the circle).
The outer boundary of the square meter area - the "edge".
8*8 = 64 square meters
Perimeter of the base of the ruler multiplied by its height
kilometer is 1000 times a meter for a perimeter
The perimeter is 82 meters.
Measure it with a meter stick. Multiply the length times the width to find the area. Two times the length plus two times the width is the perimeter.
A 3600 square meter area has a perimeter of 240 (4 x 60) meters, so a 960 (4 x 240) meter length of wire is required to make 4 rounds of the perimeter.
A perimeter is a path that surrounds an area. The word comes from the Greek peri (around) and meter(measure). The term may be used either for the path or its length - it can be thought of as the length of the outline of a shape. The perimeter of a circular area is called circumference.
What is the perimeter of a rectangle 5 meter by 650 centimeters?
The perimeter is in linear units (e.g. meters), and the area in square units (e.g. square meters), so you can't compare them directly. If you insist on comparing a square unit with a linear unit - even though this has no physical significance! - it all depends on the units chosen, and the size. A square of 1x1 has a surface area of 1 square unit, but a perimeter of 4 units. This is a counterexample to your proposition. At a size of 4x4, you reach the "break-even point"; above that, the perimeter would have a lower numerical value than the area. But please note that if you use physical measurements, the square of 1 meter x 1 meter (for example) has a perimeter of 4 meters and an area of 1 square meter (perimeter has a higher numerical value), but when you change units to centimeters, the same square has a perimeter of 400 cm, and an area of 10,000 cubic centimeters (here, the perimeter has a LOWER numerical value).