The perimeter is not going to have sq units. If the perimeter of a square is 15 units then the area would be 14.0625units squared.
Yes but not a square (or rectangle). A quadrilateral with an area of 16 sq units must have sides of at least 4 units and so a perimeter of at least 16 units. However, a circle of perimeter 15 units will enclose an area of 17.905 sq units (to 3 dp) so an ellipse of 15 units' perimeter will meet the requirements.
you have to have a shape first ex. square the square has a perimeter of 15 ft2 if it was a small sqaure
The perimeter and area of a shape do not provide sufficient information. With a given perimeter, the largest area that you can enclose is a circle, but you can then flatten the circle to reduce its area. Similarly, in terms a of quadrilaterals, a square has the largest area, but it can be flexed into a rhombus whose area can be made as small as you like. All that can be said is that there is no shape with a perimeter of 12 units whose area is 12 square units.
The dimensions are 4 units by 15 units
The perimeter is not going to have sq units. If the perimeter of a square is 15 units then the area would be 14.0625units squared.
Yes but not a square (or rectangle). A quadrilateral with an area of 16 sq units must have sides of at least 4 units and so a perimeter of at least 16 units. However, a circle of perimeter 15 units will enclose an area of 17.905 sq units (to 3 dp) so an ellipse of 15 units' perimeter will meet the requirements.
It depends on the shape of the area. It the shape is a square, the perimeter would be 1,022 feet.
you have to have a shape first ex. square the square has a perimeter of 15 ft2 if it was a small sqaure
The perimeter and area of a shape do not provide sufficient information. With a given perimeter, the largest area that you can enclose is a circle, but you can then flatten the circle to reduce its area. Similarly, in terms a of quadrilaterals, a square has the largest area, but it can be flexed into a rhombus whose area can be made as small as you like. All that can be said is that there is no shape with a perimeter of 12 units whose area is 12 square units.
If it's a rectangle then:- Area = 15*12 = 180 square units Perimeter = 15+15+12+12 = 54 units of measurement
The dimensions are 4 units by 15 units
The dimensions work out as 7 units and 15 units
60 units (4 sides x 15 = 60)
This all depends on the shape of the office. If the office is square, then each side must be 15 feet. In that case, your perimeter would be 15 + 15 + 15 + 15 = 60 feet. On the other hand, your office could be triangular, circular, rectangular, or just about any other shape. If it's a weirdly shaped rectangular office that's 225 ft x 1 ft, your perimeter would be 225 + 1 + 225 + 1 = 452 feet.
Yes, a pentagon with each side of 3 units.
Perimeter: 15+20+25 = 60 units