answersLogoWhite

0

The question cannot be answered because:

  • angles cannot be measured in centimetres;
  • the lengths of all but one sides do not uniquely determine a shape.
All that can be said, with any certainty, is that the length of the missing side is in the range (0, 44) centimetres.
User Avatar

Wiki User

8y ago

What else can I help you with?

Related Questions

Figure that has not the same length and not the same angles?

you moma


How can you use the base angles of a figure to figure out its length?

(6x+8)+ (9x-25)


What is the length of missing side b in the figure below?

Hhj


How do you find the missing side length in a pair of similar figures?

To find the missing side length in a pair of similar figures, you can use the property that corresponding sides of similar figures are in proportion. Set up a ratio using the known side lengths from both figures, such that (\frac{\text{length of one side in figure 1}}{\text{length of corresponding side in figure 2}} = \frac{\text{missing side in figure 1}}{\text{known side in figure 2}}). Cross-multiply to solve for the missing length. Finally, simplify to get the value of the missing side.


What is a figure with 4 right angles and 2 sides of the same length?

It is a rectangle. Just picture it. 4 right angles and 2 sides that are the same length.


What figure has four right angles and all sides are not the same in length?

A rectangle.


How do you use scale factor to find missing side lengths?

To find missing side lengths using a scale factor, first determine the ratio of the lengths of corresponding sides between two similar figures. If the scale factor is known, you can multiply or divide the known side length by this factor to find the missing side length. For example, if the scale factor from figure A to figure B is 2:1 and you know a side length in figure A, you can divide that length by 2 to find the corresponding side length in figure B. Conversely, if you're going from figure B to figure A, you would multiply by 2.


What geometric figure has consecutive sides a different length with no acute angles or obtuse angles?

A pentagon maybe even A polygon


Four-sided figure with two pairs of parallel sides the same length and four right angles?

A four-sided figure with two pairs of parallel sides the same length and four right angles is called a square.


What is the term for a figure that has all sides are equal in length and opposite angles are congruent?

It is a Rhombus.


What closed figure had 4 sides of equal length and 4 right angles?

Jeeme


What other information do you need to conclude that the figure is a rectangle?

To conclude that a figure is a rectangle, you need information about its angles and sides. Specifically, you should verify that all four angles are right angles (90 degrees) or that opposite sides are equal in length and parallel. Additionally, knowing that the diagonals are equal in length would further confirm that the figure is a rectangle.