the area o rectangle is 6 x 12 = 72 and the area of trapezoid is 1/2 (12+16) X 7 = 98. The sum is 72 + 98 = 170 Square cm
The area of a trapezoid is 1/2 times the sum of the bases * the height. In this case, we have the area of 65 = 1/2 * (13+13) * height. Solving for height, we have 65 * 2 / 26, so h = 5. If the two bases of a quadrilateral are of the same length, it is not a parallelogram, but a rectangle.
The area of ANY triangle is base x height. The height must be measured perpendicular to the base. In the case of an isosceles triangle, if you know only the length of the sides, you can figure out the height by Pythagoras' Theorem.
A trapezoid is a polygon. Therefore, a trapezoid has no height
Well, it depends on the area of the shape you are trying to find, if its: square: length times width triangle: base times height divided by 2 circle: 3.14 times radius squared trapezoid: base 1 plus base 2 times height divided by 2 A U shaped figure is probably half of a circle and a rectangle. The diameter of the circle is the same as the width of the rectangle.
Find the average of the two sides (Longest length plus shortest length. Divide this addition by 2). Multiply the result by its height (which is the distance between the longest side and the shortest side).
Work out each figure separately then add them together: Area of a trapezoid = 0.5*(sum of parallel bases)*height Area of a rectangle = length*height
Rectangle Area of parallelogram = Base * Height Area of rectangle = Base * Height
The area of a trapezoid is 1/2 times the sum of the bases * the height. In this case, we have the area of 65 = 1/2 * (13+13) * height. Solving for height, we have 65 * 2 / 26, so h = 5. If the two bases of a quadrilateral are of the same length, it is not a parallelogram, but a rectangle.
The area of ANY triangle is base x height. The height must be measured perpendicular to the base. In the case of an isosceles triangle, if you know only the length of the sides, you can figure out the height by Pythagoras' Theorem.
A trapezoid is a polygon. Therefore, a trapezoid has no height
A trapezoid can be divided into multiple triangles depending on how it is dissected. At minimum, a trapezoid will contain two triangles - the larger triangle formed by the longer base and the height of the trapezoid, and the smaller triangle formed by the shorter base and the height. However, additional triangles can be formed by drawing diagonals within the trapezoid, increasing the total number of triangles.
Well, it depends on the area of the shape you are trying to find, if its: square: length times width triangle: base times height divided by 2 circle: 3.14 times radius squared trapezoid: base 1 plus base 2 times height divided by 2 A U shaped figure is probably half of a circle and a rectangle. The diameter of the circle is the same as the width of the rectangle.
A figure that has length and width but not height (ie, a plane figure such as rectangle or circle)
Find the average of the two sides (Longest length plus shortest length. Divide this addition by 2). Multiply the result by its height (which is the distance between the longest side and the shortest side).
of course base times height for a square or rectangle. but for a trapezoid a= h x "b1+b2"
The trapezoid is a plane figure which has surface Area, but no volume but if there was a 3d figure your equation would be. The Surface Area of a trapezoid = ½(b1+b2) x h X Height of figure.
A rectangle. Height and width.