Area of a rectangle= Length * width Length= 5cm Width= 1cm Area=5cm *1cm =5cm2
In order to find the area of a rectangle, multiply the length by the width of the rectangle. For example: If the length of a rectangle is 5cm and the width of a rectangle is 2cm, then the area of the rectangle would be 5cm X 2cm = 10cm².
The area of rectangle is : 20.0
It is impossible to answer this question because the question could refer to an object in 7-dimensional hyperspace or it could be an irregular heptagon (or other possible shapes in 3, 4 5 or 6 dimensions). In anything but 7-d space, its exact shape is indeterminate and so the area cannot be calculated. To understand the indeterminacy, a 2cm + 2cm + 2cm + 2cm shape could be a rhombus or a square, and these will have different areas. Without the angles, there is no way of knowing which.
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It is: 5*2 = 10 square cm
5cm 2cm
What is the area of a triangle with base 2cm and height 3cm
Area of a rectangle= Length * width Length= 5cm Width= 1cm Area=5cm *1cm =5cm2
I am not sure what the point is for you to give us the dimensions of a rectangle and then ask what one of those dimensions is. Perhaps you are not sure whether the shorter or the longer of the two dimensions would be considered the length, and which the width. I would say that a rectangle measuring 2cm x 5cm is 2cm wide and 5cm long.
In order to find the area of a rectangle, multiply the length by the width of the rectangle. For example: If the length of a rectangle is 5cm and the width of a rectangle is 2cm, then the area of the rectangle would be 5cm X 2cm = 10cm².
The area of a rectangle is given by the formula: length x width. So, for the textbook, the area would be 5cm x 2cm = 10 square cm.
find the perimeter and area of a rectangle that is 15cm long and 5cm wide
area = 8*5 = 40 square cm
10
Oh, what a lovely question! Let's imagine that rectangle together. To find the dimensions, we can think of different combinations that multiply to give us 5cm², like 1cm by 5cm or 0.5cm by 10cm. Remember, there's no mistakes in art, just happy little accidents!
30 cm3