The length is usually taken to be the longer of the two sides of a rectangle. In this case, therefore, the length is 36 metres.
28
112meters.
28 inches
Area = Length *Width = 28*4 = 112 sq cm
To find the dimensions of a shape with an area of 49 and a perimeter of 28, we can assume it is a rectangle. Let the length be ( l ) and the width be ( w ). The area can be expressed as ( l \times w = 49 ) and the perimeter as ( 2l + 2w = 28 ). Solving these equations, we find that one possible set of dimensions is ( l = 7 ) and ( w = 7 ), indicating the shape is a square with sides of length 7.
To find the area of a rectangle, you multiply the length by the width. In this case, the length is 7 meters and the width is 4 meters. Therefore, the area of a 7m by 4m rectangle is 28 square meters.
To find the area of a rectangle, you multiply its length by its width. In this case, the length is 7 meters and the width is 4 meters. Multiplying 7 by 4 gives you an area of 28 square meters. So, a rectangle that is 7 meters by 4 meters has an area of 28 square meters.
Length times width gives the area of a rectangle. The rectangle with a length of 38 and a width of 28 has an area of 1064 square units.
35 and 28
28
28 meters It would be a square because A = L x W so 49 = 7 x W and the width is 7. Its perimeter is 4*7 = 28 meters.
112meters.
The perimeter would be 28 meters.
14 units.
The area is not sufficient information to determine the length and width. First of all, there is no reason to suppose that the area is rectangular as opposed to circular or triangular or some other simple or complicated shape. Even if, on the basis that the question asks for length and something else, you assume that it is a rectangle, there are infinitely many possible answers. Let L be any length greater than or equal to sqrt(28) metres and let B = 28/L metres. Then the area of a rectangle with length L metres and breadth B metres is L*(28/L) = 28 sq metres. Now there are infinitely many numbers greater than sqrt(2* and so an infinite number of possible solutions.
Oh, what a happy little rectangle we have here! To find the perimeter, we add up all the sides, which would be 2 times the width plus 2 times the length. So, 2(3) + 2(11) = 6 + 22 = 28 meters for the perimeter. And to find the area, we simply multiply the width by the length, which gives us 3 x 11 = 33 square meters of area. Just remember, there are no mistakes, only happy little accidents!
28 inches