Oh, dude, you're hitting me with some math lingo! So, if a rectangle has dimensions 5m by 3m, its perimeter would be 16m (2x5 + 2x3). To find another rectangle with the same perimeter, you could have dimensions like 4m by 4m (2x4 + 2x4 = 16m). It's all about balancing those sides, like a seesaw, man.
me
That depends on the rectangle! You can have different rectangles with the same area, but with different perimeters.
No. For example, a 4x1 rectangle will have an area of 4 and a perimeter of 10. A 2x2 rectangle will have the same area of 4, but a perimeter of 8.
the area of a rectangleis 100 square inches. The perimeter of the rectangle is 40 inches. A second rectangle has the same area but a different perimeter. Is the secind rectangle a square? Explain why or why not.
Yes
me
That depends on the rectangle! You can have different rectangles with the same area, but with different perimeters.
No. For example, a 4x1 rectangle will have an area of 4 and a perimeter of 10. A 2x2 rectangle will have the same area of 4, but a perimeter of 8.
the area of a rectangleis 100 square inches. The perimeter of the rectangle is 40 inches. A second rectangle has the same area but a different perimeter. Is the secind rectangle a square? Explain why or why not.
Yes
Yes they can.
yes
A rectangle cannot really have the same area and perimeter because an area is a 2-dimensional concept while a perimeter is 1-dimensional.However, you can have rectangles such that the numericalvalue of their area and perimeter are the same.Take any number x > 2 and let y = 2x/(x-2)Then a rectangle with sides of x and y has an area and perimeter whose value is 2x2/(x-2)
Square is a special case of a rectangle and the same formula may be used to find the perimeter
For a fixed perimeter, the area will always be the same, regardless of how you describe the rectangle.
yes
No rectangle can have equal perimeter and length.