If you restrict yourself to whole numbers, the perimeter is 120 units.
The perimeter is 120 cm
A 30x30 Square A square has 4 equal sides, and when we add up the four sides we get 120. So to find the the square, we can do 120/4 = 30 This tells us that the square is 30x30
The area of square is : 14400.0
The area is 900 ft2
120 is possible
If you restrict yourself to whole numbers, the perimeter is 120 units.
The perimeter is 120 cm
A 30x30 Square A square has 4 equal sides, and when we add up the four sides we get 120. So to find the the square, we can do 120/4 = 30 This tells us that the square is 30x30
The area of square is : 14400.0
The area is 900 ft2
Never heard of centermetres before, and an area cannot be 120 centimetres because that is a measure of distance, not area. Instead, let us start with an area of 120 SQUARE centimetres. For a given area, the shape with the smallest perimeter is a circle. A circle with an area of 120 sq cm would have a radius of 6.18 cm and so a perimeter of 38.83 cm (to 2 dp).
The perimeter of a 900 square centimeter square is 120 centimeters.
120 square units
Suppose the length of each side is s metres.Then perimeter = 4*s = 120 metresso that s - 30 metres.And therefore, area = s2= 900 metres2.Suppose the length of each side is s metres.Then perimeter = 4*s = 120 metresso that s - 30 metres.And therefore, area = s2= 900 metres2.Suppose the length of each side is s metres.Then perimeter = 4*s = 120 metresso that s - 30 metres.And therefore, area = s2= 900 metres2.Suppose the length of each side is s metres.Then perimeter = 4*s = 120 metresso that s - 30 metres.And therefore, area = s2= 900 metres2.
If the area is 900 and it is square, then each side measure 30 yards. That means the perimeter is 30x4 or 120 yards.
To answer this simply try a few out for yourself. In a 2x1 cm rectangle, the area is 2 cm squared and the perimeter is 6 cm In a 12x10 rectangle, the area is 120 cm squared and the perimeter is 44 cm. In some cases, the perimeter is larger and in others it is smaller. To answer your question, no, the perimeter of a rectangle is NOT always greater than its area.