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To answer this simply try a few out for yourself. In a 2x1 cm rectangle, the area is 2 cm squared and the perimeter is 6 cm In a 12x10 rectangle, the area is 120 cm squared and the perimeter is 44 cm. In some cases, the perimeter is larger and in others it is smaller. To answer your question, no, the perimeter of a rectangle is NOT always greater than its area.
Perimeter of a rectangle is 2(l+b).Area of rectangle is 216 centimeter square.
Anything from almost 75,9 (if the rectangle were a square with each side 18,97 cm) to much larger, 722 if the rectangle is 1 cm by 360 cm or if the rectangle were 0,5 by 720 cm - still an area of 360 cm2! - the perimeter would be 1441cmGreater than 4 * sqrt 360
Any length greater than 1 mile. The area of a rectangle is not sufficient to determine its perimeter.
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To answer this simply try a few out for yourself. In a 2x1 cm rectangle, the area is 2 cm squared and the perimeter is 6 cm In a 12x10 rectangle, the area is 120 cm squared and the perimeter is 44 cm. In some cases, the perimeter is larger and in others it is smaller. To answer your question, no, the perimeter of a rectangle is NOT always greater than its area.
The circumference of the circle is larger than the perimeter of the rectangle.
11 x 12 rectangle has a larger perimeter = 46 units The 132 square unit area will give a square a perimeter of 45.9565 units
Sometimes. Experiment with a small square and with a large square (though any shape rectangle will do). A square of 4 x 4 has a perimeter of 16, and an area of 16. A smaller square has more perimeter than area. A larger square has more area than perimeter.
Perimeter is a unit of length. Area is a unit of area. The two units are not directly convertible.However, the area of a rectangle is length times width, and the perimeter is two times length plus two times width. Given constant perimeter, a square has maximum area, while a very thin rectangle has nearly zero area. (In calculus terms, the limit of the area as length or width goes to zero is zero.)Depending on how you want to name your units, you can always find a rectangle whose perimeter is "larger" than area, but this is a numerical trick that is not valid in any school of thought of mathematics that I know.
yes if you have a 1 by 1 rectangle, you would have a perimeter of 4 but an area of 1 [ADDED} It's really a meaningless question because although such numbers suggest that, you cannot compare a linear dimension (perimeter) with an area.
Of course, a rectangle can have a greater perimeter and a greater area. Simply double all the sides: the perimeter is doubled and the area is quadrupled - both bigger than they were.
Perimeter of a rectangle is 2(l+b).Area of rectangle is 216 centimeter square.
yes it can; a rectangle 5 by 2 has perimeter 14 and area 10 for example; a rectangle 10 by 2 has perimeter 24 and area 20, both greater.
Anything from almost 75,9 (if the rectangle were a square with each side 18,97 cm) to much larger, 722 if the rectangle is 1 cm by 360 cm or if the rectangle were 0,5 by 720 cm - still an area of 360 cm2! - the perimeter would be 1441cmGreater than 4 * sqrt 360
No, because the perimeter is the outside edge and the area is the amount of space in the shape
Any length greater than 1 mile. The area of a rectangle is not sufficient to determine its perimeter.