The perimeter of a parallelogram is: 2 x length + 2 x width.
No!
Its perimeter is the sum of its 4 sides
The formula for area of a parallelogram is bh. Base times height.
Assuming that you are asking about the formula for the AREA of a parallelogram (there is no formula for a parallelogram), A = bh where A is the "area", b is the length of any side (called a "base"), and h is the "height" measured perpendicular from that base to the opposite side.
Circumference of a parallelogram = (2 x length) + (2 x width).
The perimeter of a parallelogram is: 2 x length + 2 x width.
No!
It should be an infinitesimally small fraction, since a circumference is a curve and the base of a parallelogram is a straight line.
A parallelogram is a plane two-dimensional geometric figure called a quadrilateral having length and width, and whose opposites are parallel and of equal length. The formulas associated with a parallelogram are: Area = length x width and Circumference = 2 x (length + width).
The area formula for the parallelogram is related to the area formula for a rectangle because you can make the parallelogram into a rectangle to find the area.
Its perimeter is the sum of its 4 sides
The formula for area of a parallelogram is bh. Base times height.
circumference=r2pi
Assuming that you are asking about the formula for the AREA of a parallelogram (there is no formula for a parallelogram), A = bh where A is the "area", b is the length of any side (called a "base"), and h is the "height" measured perpendicular from that base to the opposite side.
Because:- circumference/diameter = pi and when the formula is rearranged circumference = pi*diameter
The formula for the circumference of a circle is the same, whatever its diameter. Circumference = pi*diameter.