Perimeter = 24 and area = 27 . . . . . rectangle, 3 by 9 Perimeter = 32 and area = 15 . . . . . rectangle, 1 by 15
Height is length and base is width. Therfore, width is 9 (cm) and length is 4 (cm) which gives us an area of 36 cm sq.
It would depend on the figure. Your question is not specific enough.
It must be a perimeter. An area measurement would a square measurement like 56cm². ■
The lengths of the base and the side. You would multiply these to get the area and would double sum of the two to obtain the perimeter measurement.
-- The perimeter is the sum of the lengths of the four sides. -- The area is the product of (length of the base) x (height of the figure).
Perimeter = 24 and area = 27 . . . . . rectangle, 3 by 9 Perimeter = 32 and area = 15 . . . . . rectangle, 1 by 15
Base x perpendicular height
Height is length and base is width. Therfore, width is 9 (cm) and length is 4 (cm) which gives us an area of 36 cm sq.
It would depend on the figure. Your question is not specific enough.
yes if you have a 1 by 1 rectangle, you would have a perimeter of 4 but an area of 1 [ADDED} It's really a meaningless question because although such numbers suggest that, you cannot compare a linear dimension (perimeter) with an area.
In exactly the same way that you have for the question. a..r..e..a that spells area and similarly with perimeter!
It must be a perimeter. An area measurement would a square measurement like 56cm². ■
If the sides are in cm, then you would multiply the length of the shape by the width, which equals area. And area is in the unit of the sides but squared. So in this example it would be cm2. ========================================= The answer to the question is: You can't. The perimeter doesn't tell you what the area is. You can have two different drawings with the same perimeter and different areas, or with the same area and different perimeters. Even if they're both triangles, or both rectangles, etc. You can't take perimeter and 'work out' area from it.
The perimeter would be 28 cm
The lengths of the base and the side. You would multiply these to get the area and would double sum of the two to obtain the perimeter measurement.
No, you can not calculate an area if you know just the perimeter. For example, rectangle with sides of 10 and 20 would have a perimeter of 60 and an area of 200, but a square of sides 15 would have a perimeter of 60 and an area of 225. You need to know more details about the shape than just the perimeter.