The area of a rectangle of sides 9cm and 10cm is:9cm x 10cm = 90cm2This is equivalent to 0.009m2
0.000...1cm length on two sides. 19.999...9cm length on the other two.
Yes. It would be an equilateral triangle with three equal sides. It would also be equiangular, with three equal angles, each measuring 60 degrees.
Area = 1/2 (base x height) If the triangle is sitting on the 9cm side, then 72 = 1/2 ( 9 x height ) Height = 16 cm There are an infinite number of ways to draw the remaining two sides such that the height of the triangle is 16 cm. So the given information doesn't define a unique perimeter.
yes
The area of a rectangle of sides 9cm and 10cm is:9cm x 10cm = 90cm2This is equivalent to 0.009m2
0.000...1cm length on two sides. 19.999...9cm length on the other two.
Yes. It would be an equilateral triangle with three equal sides. It would also be equiangular, with three equal angles, each measuring 60 degrees.
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This is not an equilateral triangle.
any 2-D shape could have a perimeter of 9cm. One example is a square with sides of 9/4 cm.
The third side can have any value in the range (2 cm, 16 cm).
There are an infinite number of each. I can't draw them right now, as I am busy.
Perimeter = sum of the lengths of sides = 5* 7 cm = 35 cm
Draw a triangle with sides of 4*234 cm, 5*234 cm and 7*234 cm = 936 cm, 1170 cm and 1638 cm.
Area = 1/2 (base x height) If the triangle is sitting on the 9cm side, then 72 = 1/2 ( 9 x height ) Height = 16 cm There are an infinite number of ways to draw the remaining two sides such that the height of the triangle is 16 cm. So the given information doesn't define a unique perimeter.
there are 10mm in a cm, so 88mm is closer to 9cm because it is 8.8cm