For it to be a right angle triangle the 3rd side must be 5cm
Any shape you want as long as the area within its boundary is 6cm2.examples:a triangle of base 6 cm and height 2 cm;a rectangle 2cm by 3 cm;an L shaped hexagon with sides 5cm, 2cm, 1cm, 1cm, 4cm, 1cm;circle of radius approx 1.382 cm;
The area of qa triangle is always half of the area of a rectangle with the same dimensions
Draw a right angled triangle with legs of 4cm and 6cm
an iscoceles triangle
It will be a right angle triangle with a base of 3cm, a height of 4cm and a hypotenuse of 5cm
It could be 3cm by 2cm in size.
For it to be a right angle triangle the 3rd side must be 5cm
You don't have to do anything at all. As soon as you draw a triangle, it automaticallyhas area. The only trick for you is to figure out how much area it has.
Any shape you want as long as the area within its boundary is 6cm2.examples:a triangle of base 6 cm and height 2 cm;a rectangle 2cm by 3 cm;an L shaped hexagon with sides 5cm, 2cm, 1cm, 1cm, 4cm, 1cm;circle of radius approx 1.382 cm;
Yes
A right-angle triangle is half of a square or rectangle. Draw a square or rectangle and draw a line from one corner to the corner diagonally opposite. You now have two triangles of the same area.
The area of qa triangle is always half of the area of a rectangle with the same dimensions
Because - if you draw lines at right-angles from the base of a triangle vertically until they reach the highest point, then draw a horizontal line that connects those points, touching the highest point of the triangle - the area outside the triangle (but inside the resulting quadrilateral) is exactly half the area of the quadrilateral.
No shape can have a volume of 6 cm2
Draw a right angled triangle with legs of 4cm and 6cm
an iscoceles triangle