the park is 30m x 90m
IF U DON"T KNOW WELL HERE IT GOES say u have volume:6 cu. in length"3 in. WIDTH:2 in. U ADD IT ALL UP AND THERE YOU GO. TADA ???????'S CONTACT ME AT: jocelyneszaragoza@gmail.com
P= w + w + L + LOR:P= 2w + 2L* * * * *The above is true only for parallelograms (or kites) but not for other quadrilaterals or other polygons. Triangles DO have a perimeter. And the shape need not even be a polygon - a semicircle has a perimeter.So the correct answer is:Perimeter = sum of all the sides of the figure.Length plus width times two
I would go with millimetres
Ah, what a lovely question. To find the area of a rectangle, you simply multiply the length by the width. So, 10 meters multiplied by 6 meters equals 60 square meters. Isn't that just a happy little calculation?
They are generally ordered by Length x Width x Height.
length/width
OK so we have two formulas: Length = width + 5 (since legth is 5 more than width) length + width + length + width = perimeter= 82 (form. for perm.) so we can replace every instance of "length" with "width + 5" since they are the same. width + 5 + width + width + 5 + width = 82 4xwidth + 10 = 82 4X width = 72 width = 23 so now go back and replace "width" with 23. length = 23 + 5 length = 28 There you go.
The capacity of any book is infinite. If it can get a mind thinking, there is no limit to where that mind can go.If you are referring to the more mundane definition - of volume, then the answer is length x width x thickness in appropriate cubic units.The capacity of any book is infinite. If it can get a mind thinking, there is no limit to where that mind can go.If you are referring to the more mundane definition - of volume, then the answer is length x width x thickness in appropriate cubic units.The capacity of any book is infinite. If it can get a mind thinking, there is no limit to where that mind can go.If you are referring to the more mundane definition - of volume, then the answer is length x width x thickness in appropriate cubic units.The capacity of any book is infinite. If it can get a mind thinking, there is no limit to where that mind can go.If you are referring to the more mundane definition - of volume, then the answer is length x width x thickness in appropriate cubic units.
you are missing the length of the model. Without that you cannot go anything.
When you go to shoe store, they have this feet measurement. It measures both your shoe length and width.
"Thickness" is a length or distance. The SI unit for length or distance is the meter. In order to produce a convenient number when you're talking about the thickness of a piece of paper, you'll probably want to use one of the meter's sub-multiples, such as the centimeter or millimeter. For tissue or 'onionskin', you might even go to the micrometer.
A rectangle has two dimensions, length and width. You haven't said what the width is. The perimeter is the distance around the rectangle. Imagine going round it. You would go 42 inches, then a width, then another 42 inches, then another width. In general, the perimeter of a rectangle is twice its length plus twice its width.
YOu add a # to the width and then you subtract the same # from the length! If you want to go all the way and make the area as big as possible, then you want to make the length and width both 1/4 of the perimeter.
Threads that go the width are the 'weft' threads that go the length are the 'warp'
the park is 30m x 90m
Widths and lengths are two entirely different things. They don't go into anything other than Length x Width = Area.