18
16 meters
To find the perimeter of a rectangle, you add up all the sides. In this case, the room is 5 meters long and 3 meters wide. So, the perimeter would be 5 + 5 + 3 + 3 = 16 meters.
Perimeter is 2l+2w, so 10+6 is 16 metres
20m (4 sides x 5 = 20).
160 square meters.
16 meters
To find the perimeter of a rectangle, you add up all the sides. In this case, the room is 5 meters long and 3 meters wide. So, the perimeter would be 5 + 5 + 3 + 3 = 16 meters.
20
Perimeter is 2l+2w, so 10+6 is 16 metres
2345 inches 2345 inches
Ah, what a lovely question! To find the perimeter of a rectangle, you simply add up all the sides. So for your rectangle that is 5 meters by 4 meters, you would add 5 + 5 + 4 + 4 to get a perimeter of 18 meters. Just imagine that rectangle surrounded by happy little numbers, creating a beautiful border of mathematics.
4*5 = 20 square meters
The square root of 100 is 10, so the edges of the square are 10 meters in length. As there are 4 edges then the perimeter will measure 10*4 = 40 meters
0.8 meters X 5 = 4 meters
20m (4 sides x 5 = 20).
The perimeter of 4 meters by 5 meters is 18. Is the figure a square? if it is then the answer is 18m squared. The first answer is correct if the shape is a parallelogram; the second is rubbish. A square cannot be 4m by 5 m because one of the defining characteristics of a square is that its sides are the same length! The perimeter is the length (therefore metres, NOT m sq) around the shape. 4m+5m+4m+5m = 18m.
20