547 cm or 5.47 m
5.47 m or 547 cm
The sum of 5 and 47 is 52.
The scale factor between two lengths is found by dividing one length by the other. In this case, if we take the lengths of 3 cm and 5 cm, the scale factor can be calculated as 3 cm / 5 cm = 0.6. This means that 3 cm is 0.6 times the length of 5 cm. Conversely, the scale factor from 5 cm to 3 cm would be 5 cm / 3 cm, which equals approximately 1.67.
Assuming by "equal" you mean that each side is 5 cm, then the perimeter of a square is 5 cm * 4 (sides) = 5 cm + 5 cm + 5 cm + 5 cm = 20 cm The perimeter of any polygon is the sum of the sides Alternatively if by "equal" you mean the sides sum to 5 cm, then the perimeter is 5 cm. Although this is probably not what you meant =)
That is a list of four different lengths.
5.47 m or 547 cm
The sum of 5 and 47 is 52.
Perimeter = sum of the lengths of sides = 5* 7 cm = 35 cm
1m = 100 cm so 3m = 300 cm300 cm/60 cm = 5 lengths.
25.5 cm. If it is a regular pentagon, then it has 5 sides that are all the same length. The perimeter is the sum of the lengths of the sides, so just try 5.1 (length) x 5 (# of sides), which is 25.5.
There are 50.
A 40 cm piece of string can be cut into eight 5 cm pieces.
To find the area of a trapezoid, you use the formula: Area = (1/2) * (sum of parallel sides) * height. In this case, the sum of the parallel sides is 4 cm + 5 cm = 9 cm. Plugging in the values, we get: Area = (1/2) * 9 cm * 3 cm = 13.5 square cm. Therefore, the area of the trapezoid is 13.5 square cm.
yes
Assuming by "equal" you mean that each side is 5 cm, then the perimeter of a square is 5 cm * 4 (sides) = 5 cm + 5 cm + 5 cm + 5 cm = 20 cm The perimeter of any polygon is the sum of the sides Alternatively if by "equal" you mean the sides sum to 5 cm, then the perimeter is 5 cm. Although this is probably not what you meant =)
That is a list of four different lengths.
If its base diagonals are 8 and 6 then by using Pythagoras it will have 4 equal lengths of 5 cm. Check: 0.5*8*6*1/3*5 = 40 cubic cm