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No. The square is a special case of rectangle where all the sides are of equal length. So some rectangles are squares, and all squares are rectangles.
Look at the definition of a square and a rectangle, and it should become quite clear. Briefly, a rectangle may, or may not, have sides of different length. If it does have sides of different length, then it is not a square.
Yes, all squares are also rectangles. But not all rectangles are also squares. Squares are a specific type of rectangle that has all equal length sides and all 90 degree vertices.
To find the length of a diagonal in a rectangle, use the Pythagorean method. Diagonal length = square root(length squared + height squared).
It can be any rectangle having a combination of width and length that, when multiplied together, yield a product of 100 squares. The rectangle could be 1 square wide and 100 squares long, or 5 squares wide and 20 squares long, or it could be a plane square with 10 squares wide on each side.
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Simple. Just multiply the length by the width of the rectangle. This also works for squares.
No. The square is a special case of rectangle where all the sides are of equal length. So some rectangles are squares, and all squares are rectangles.
Look at the definition of a square and a rectangle, and it should become quite clear. Briefly, a rectangle may, or may not, have sides of different length. If it does have sides of different length, then it is not a square.
Yes, all squares are also rectangles. But not all rectangles are also squares. Squares are a specific type of rectangle that has all equal length sides and all 90 degree vertices.
The above statement is not true since some rectangles ARE squares. Squares are a special type of a rectangle - one in which all sides are of equal length. In other words, the set of all squares is a subset of the set of all rectangles.
To find the length of a diagonal in a rectangle, use the Pythagorean method. Diagonal length = square root(length squared + height squared).
Imagine the rectangle divided into squares corresponding to length and width... Eg a 6" x 5" rectangle would have 5 rows of six one-inch squares, total 30, which would make its area 30 squinches
A square is a rectangle because the definition of a rectangle is that it has four straight sides and the opposite sides are equal in length. Squares have four straight sides, and their opposite sides match up in length. Therefore, a square is also a rectangle.
All squares are rectangles but not all rectangles are squares. A square has all sides the same length and all internal angles 90 degrees. A rectangle has opposite sides the same length and internal angles of 90 degrees.
They are not technically the same. A square is a rectangle but a rectangle is not a square. A rectangle requires opposite sides to be the same length. A square's opposite sides are the same length so it is a rectangle. A square requires all sides to be the same length, not just opposite sides. So most rectangles are not squares.