answersLogoWhite

0


Best Answer

It can be any length you like greater than (or equal to) 4 x √60 ≈ 30.98

A parallelogram is a sheared rectangle; the more the rectangle shears, the longer the originally "vertical" sides (the height of the parallelogram) become. (Shearing does not change the area of the shape.)

User Avatar

Wiki User

13y ago
This answer is:
User Avatar

Add your answer:

Earn +20 pts
Q: What is the perimeter of a parallelogram with a an area of 60?
Write your answer...
Submit
Still have questions?
magnify glass
imp
Related questions

What is the rule for finding the area and perimeter of a parallelogram?

area of parallelogram= base*height perimeter= 2(length+breadth)


What are the dimesions of a parallelogram that has an area of 24 cm and a perimeter of 22cm?

The area and perimeter of a parallelogram are not sufficient to determine its dimensions.


What is the perimeter of a parallelogram with side of 40 units and 60 units?

Perimeter = 40+40+60+60 = 200 units


What does the perimeter of a parallelogram tell you about its area?

Nothing at all.


How do you find the area of a parallelogram with only the perimeter?

area is length times width


How do you get the area and perimeter of a parallelogram?

p=2l+2w a=wl


What is the perimeter of a parallelogram 60cm and 50 cm?

It is: 2*(60+70) = 260 cm


Find the perimeter and the area of each parallelogram?

I smell a textbook question...


What is the name of the parallelogram having the greatest area for a given perimeter?

A square.


Does a parallelogram add up to 180?

No. In fact a parallelogram does not add up. It has a perimeter, it has an area, it has four angles and they are or can be added up. The the parallelogram itself cannot.


Can a triangle have the same perimeter and area as a parallelogram?

I don't know about the relation in the perimeters of a triangle and a parallelogram but if a triangle is on the same base on which the parallelogram is and the triangle is between the same parallel lines of the parallelogram, then the area of the triangle will be half the area of the parallelogram. That is, area of a triangle = 1/2 area of a parallelogram if the triangle is on the same base and between the same parallel lines.


How would doubling the dimensions effect a parallelogram in perimeter and area?

When all of the linear dimensions are doubled . . .-- the perimeter is also doubled-- the area is multiplied by 22 = 4.