6.975m2
Area of a parallelogram is 'base multiplied to the PERPENDICULAR height. NOT the sloping height.
The formulae are quite similar; you multiply base x height, where the height is perpendicular to the base. In the case of a trapezium, you need to calculate the average of the two bases first.
The shortest distance from the given information will be its height
Please clarify what data is given, and what you want to solve for. To calculate the perimeter, add the length of all four sides. To calculate the area, the formula is basically same as for a rectangle: length x height; however, the height must be measured perpendicular to the side which you use as "length".
The area o fa parallelogram is the height (distance between two parallel sides) time then length of a side perpendicular to the height.
Perimeter is the sum of its 4 sides Area is its length times its perpendicular height
The area of a parallelogram with base 18cm and perpendicular height 18cm is 324 cm2
The area of a parallelogram is the base times the height; the height must be measured perpendicular to the base. If you correctly measure the height perpendicular to the base and you get different measurements, then you are NOT dealing with a parallelogram.
It is the perpendicular distance from the top or bottom of the parallelogram to the opposite side.
The single altitude of a parallelogram is its perpendicular height
Area of a triangle = 0.5*base*perpendicular height Area of a parallelogram = base*perpendicular height
It is the length of its perpendicular height
it is the height!
They both use perpendicular height and are in square units. Area of a trapezoid = 0.5*(sum of parallel sides)*perpendicular height Area of a parallelogram = base*perpendicular height
Because the area of a parallelogram is length times perpendicular height and the area of a rectangle is also length times perpendicular height
To find the area of a parallelogram, multiply the length of the base by the height. The height should be perpendicular to the base.
It is: base times perpendicular height