That is correct, when finding the area for rectangles, you would be using the equation b*h, and with a right angle triangle would you use b*h/2.
Squares are actually also rectangles so you could make 8 rectangles without touching any of the squares. However, if you could cut the squares, that would be a different problem....
To find the area of regular and irregular polygons without specific formulas, one effective strategy is to decompose the shape into simpler geometric figures, such as triangles or rectangles, calculate their areas, and then sum them up. Another approach is to use grid or graph paper, counting the full and partial squares that the polygon occupies to estimate the area. Additionally, for irregular shapes, the method of triangulation can be employed, dividing the polygon into triangles and applying the triangle area formula for each segment.
Form the six squares into the six faces of a cube.
It is not possible to answer this question without knowing the size of the individual squares - 1 sq inch squares, 1 sq ft squares, 1 sq metre squares or what?
4 - without cutting the 1cm x 1cm squares.
Squares are actually also rectangles so you could make 8 rectangles without touching any of the squares. However, if you could cut the squares, that would be a different problem....
yes if it is a square. squares are rectangles with their 4 sides and 4 right angles, but rectangles are not squares without 4 equal sides
A quadrilateral is a shape with four sides. A life without quadrilaterals would mean a life without squares, rectangles, parallelograms, and rhombuses.
you can find out by dividing the median and mean and get the answer
the tiles are RECTANGLES and the sign says dont step on any SQUARES!!!so u can just walk across the room without stopping!!!!!!!!
Parallelograms have parallel diagonals (these include squares, rectangles, rhombi, an trapezoids). Parallel lines are lines with the same slope that could carry on infinitely without intersecting. A parallelogram can have 1 or 2 sets of parallel lines.
The answer is Infinite...The rectangles can have an infinitely small area and therefore, without a minimum value to the area of the rectangles, there will be an uncountable amount (infinite) to be able to fit into that 10 sq.in.
Form the six squares into the six faces of a cube.
It is not possible to answer this question without knowing the size of the individual squares - 1 sq inch squares, 1 sq ft squares, 1 sq metre squares or what?
4 - without cutting the 1cm x 1cm squares.
A rhombus has 4 sides.
8 squares. One of 11x11 Five of 2x2 Two of 1x1