It's the perpendicular distance between its lengths
The area of a parallelogram is the base times the height; the height must be measured perpendicular to the base. If you correctly measure the height perpendicular to the base and you get different measurements, then you are NOT dealing with a parallelogram.
The height is the length of its altitude.
base*height
YES. A square is a parallelogram and, its height is one of the sides. (Same goes for every rectangle, not only squares.)
The height is a perpendicular angle from the base. The sides of the parallelogram are slanted tho and this will vary for every parallelogram. To find the height you typically make a triangle with one of the slanted sides.
To find the area of a parallelogram, multiply the length of the base by the height. The height should be perpendicular to the base.
To find the height of a parallelogram, you divide the area by the base length. So in this case, the height of the parallelogram would be 115/12 = 9.58 to the nearest hundredth.
Multiply the base times the height make sure when measuring for height you go fom a corner to the top to find the right height that you are looking for. Have fun!:- )
What is the area of a parallelogram with a base of 4 meters and a height of 10 meters?
Area of a parallelogram in square units = base*height
It is the perpendicular distance from the top or bottom of the parallelogram to the opposite side.
To find the area of a parallelogram, multiply the base by the height.