Well, darling, to find the volume of a cuboid, you simply multiply its length, width, and height. So, for this sassy little cuboid measuring 5cm by 6cm by 7cm, the volume would be 5 x 6 x 7 = 210 cubic centimeters. Voilà!
90 cubic cm
Oh, what a happy little question! Imagine a beautiful cuboid with sides 5cm by 3cm by 6cm. Now, gently sketch a net of this cuboid by drawing a rectangle for the top and bottom, and rectangles for the sides. Label each side with its corresponding dimension, and remember to add tabs for gluing it all together. Just let your imagination flow and create a lovely net that showcases the dimensions of this cuboid.
The volume is answered in cubic centimeters, which is typed out like this 1cm*5cm*6cm = 30 cm3
When taking the volume you do not add them you multiply them. 6cm x 5cm x 3cm = 90cm2
72 cm3
90 cubic cm
Volume = height * width * depth (front-back). 5cm * 6cm * 7cm = 210cm3.
I'm pretty sure its 20 cm but I'm not sure.
Oh, what a happy little question! Imagine a beautiful cuboid with sides 5cm by 3cm by 6cm. Now, gently sketch a net of this cuboid by drawing a rectangle for the top and bottom, and rectangles for the sides. Label each side with its corresponding dimension, and remember to add tabs for gluing it all together. Just let your imagination flow and create a lovely net that showcases the dimensions of this cuboid.
V = 10cm * 6cm * 5cm = 300cm3
The volume is answered in cubic centimeters, which is typed out like this 1cm*5cm*6cm = 30 cm3
5cm x 2cm x 6cm = 60 cubic cm.
Volume = Height x Width X length (it doesn't matter in which order the measurements are used, as long as they are all used).Therefore:5cm x 6cm x 7cm = 210cm3The cm2 means squared, while cm3 means cubed.We are learning all the time, apparently!
The perimeter of a rectangle whose length is 5cm wit a width of 6cm is 22cm
Three measures of length cannot define a pyramid.
When taking the volume you do not add them you multiply them. 6cm x 5cm x 3cm = 90cm2
Volume = pi*52*6 = 471.239 cubic cm (rounded to 3 dp).