A rectangle made up of 48 square tiles has an area of 48 square units, whatever the units of each tile are (if they are one-inch-square tiles or one-foot-square tiles, etc.)
Let's say that the area is made up of 48 one-foot-square tiles. Then the area is 48 square feet.
To find the area of a rectangle, you multiply the length times the width.
So, A = L x W, and we know that A = 48.
What two numbers can you multiply to get 48?
2 and 24, 3 and 16, 4 and 12, and 6 and 8.
So you could have four different size rectangles that cover 48 square feet. The dimensions are:
2 feet by 24 feet
3 feet by 16 feet
4 feet by 12 feet
6 feet by 8 feet
The number of square tiles is always equal to factor pairs. As an example, imagine a rectangle that contains 8 squares - 2 rows of 4. 2 X 4 = 8. In other words, the dimensions of the rectangles are ALWAYS equal to a factor pair of the number of squares in the rectangle. A rectangle containing 24 squares could be made as 24x1, 12x2, 8x3, or 6x4.
Using all five tiles, only one rectangle can be made. (1 tile wide by 5 tiles long) Using less than all five tiles, you could make six different rectangles. (squares are technically rectangles too.) The rectangles possible would be: 1 tile wide by 5 tiles long, 1 wide by four long, 1 wide by 3 long, 1 wide by 2 long, 1 wide by 1 long, and 2 wide by 2 long.
There is no good reason why floor tiles should be 1 foot. It's just the way the tessellation was designed by the person who made the tiles.
well it has 3 faces top , side , front .The top is a rectangle , the side is 3 rectangles and the front is 1 simple rectangle so its made out of rectangles duhh lol ,..
Rectangles are made up of 2 sets of parallel lines, which are perpendicular to one another.
1x24, 2x12, 3x8, 4x6.
1 x 122 x 63 x 4
The only ones are (1 x 21) and (3 x 7) .
-- If the tiles are not square, then there's not enough information to answer the question.-- If the tiles are square, then the following rectangles can be made :1 x 482 x 243 x 164 x 126 x 8
yes they can
1 x 42 2 x 21 3 x 14 6 x 7
1 x 48 2 x 24 3 x 16 4 x 12 6 x 8
Oh, dude, let me blow your mind with some math magic. So, with 14 tiles, you can make 6 rectangles. But like, who's counting, right? Just toss those tiles around and see what happens. Math is fun, man.
The number of square tiles is always equal to factor pairs. As an example, imagine a rectangle that contains 8 squares - 2 rows of 4. 2 X 4 = 8. In other words, the dimensions of the rectangles are ALWAYS equal to a factor pair of the number of squares in the rectangle. A rectangle containing 24 squares could be made as 24x1, 12x2, 8x3, or 6x4.
The number of square tiles is always equal to factor pairs. As an example, imagine a rectangle that contains 8 squares - 2 rows of 4. 2 X 4 = 8. In other words, the dimensions of the rectangles are ALWAYS equal to a factor pair of the number of squares in the rectangle. A rectangle containing 24 squares could be made as 24x1, 12x2, 8x3, or 6x4.
1*100, 2*50, 4*25, 5*20, 10*10.
1*12, 2*6, 3*4, 4*3, 6*2 and 12*1