The perimeter of a square with an area of 9 square feet is: 12 feet.
The area of square with a perimeter of 36 is 81. If the perimeter is 36, then each side must be 36 divided by 4, or 9. The area of a square is side squared, so that is 9 squared or 81.
The area of one square yard is 9 square feet. 3x3=9
"regular feet" are one-dimensional measurements. Square feet are measures of area--two dimensional measurements. A square foot is a square that has foot long sides. 9 square feet are the area equivalent of 9 square feet.
36, area is equal to length X width, perimeter is equal to 2(length)+2(width) in a square length is equal to width, so we take the square root of the area to find that both are 9, which means the perimeter is 9 X 4, 36.
Is this a trick question? A square with a perimeter of 5 feet and an area of 5 square feet cannot exist. Let's see why. If a square has a perimeter of 5 feet, that means the sum of the lengths of the four sides is 5 feet. The four sides are of equal length (it's a square), and the sum of the four (equal) lengths is 5 feet, then each side is (5 feet divided by 4) in length. That's 1 1/4 feet for each side. The area will be the square of the length of a side or 1 1/4 squared, which will be 25/16 or 1 9/16 square feet in area. If a square has an area of 5 square feet, the length of a side will be the square root of the area. The square root of five is about 2.236, so each side will be about 2.236 feet in length. It's perimeter will about 8.944 feet. With the math working the way it did there, it makes it kinda hard to have a square with a perimeter of 5 feet and an area of 5 square feet. But don't bounce yet. As an aside (but a related one) let's estimate the answers. First, if a square has a perimeter of 5 feet, it's four (equal) sides will sum to the 5 feet. The 5 divided by 4 is a little over one, so each side is a little over 1 foot long. The area of a square with a side a little over 1 foot long will be the square of the length of one side or (1+ a little bit times 1+ a little bit) which will be equal to 1+ a little more than a little square feet for the area. Make sense? Onward. If a square has an area of 5 square feet, a side will be the square root of 5 feet long. If we consider the square of 2 is 4, the it will take the square of 2+ a little bit to equal 5 square feet. Got that? Now we bounce.
The area of a square with a perimeter of 12 feet is: 9 square feet.
The area is 9 square feet.
The perimeter of a square is four times the length of any of its sides. Thus, you can divide the perimeter by 4, and then square the result to get the area.
To find the area of a square with a perimeter of 12 feet, we first need to determine the length of one side. Since a square has four equal sides, we divide the perimeter by 4 to get each side length, which is 3 feet. To find the area of the square, we square the length of one side, so the area would be 3 feet x 3 feet = 9 square feet.
Area = 22*9 = 198 square feet Perimeter = 22+22+9+9 = 62 feet
Perimeter of the square: 4*9 = 36 feet
5ft. :/
If the area of the garden is 81 square feet and the perimeter is 36 feet, the solution is that the garden is a square 9 feet x 9 feet, where 4 x (side) =36.
The perimeter of a square is 4 times its sides. So a square garden with a length of 9 feet has a perimeter of 4*9 = 36 feet.
No. Take a square with each side 9 feet long. The perimeter is 9+9+9+9 = 36 ft and the area is 9 x 9 = 81 square feet. Now squash the square down a bit so that it is a 7 x 11 rectangle. The perimeter is still 36 ft, but the area is now smaller at 77 square feet. Squash it right down to just 1 ft tall by 17 ft wide and the perimeter is still 36 ft, but the area is now just 17 square feet. So for any given perimeter, the closer the shape of a rectangle is to a square, the larger will be the area.
9 square feet is. Since each side has the same length, and there are four sides, each side is 3 feet. The area is (3 feet)2, which is 9 square feet.)
If the area was a square the perimeter would be 2,504.52 feet.