A rectangle has four sides, the opposite sides being equal in length to one another (giving it four 90 degree angles). If one counts only whole numbers, there are many possibilities to make a rectangle with the perimeter of 60: 1, 1, 29, 29; 2, 2, 28, 28; 3, 3, 27, 27; 4, 4, 26, 26; 5, 5, 25, 25; 6, 6, 24, 24; 7, 7, 23, 23; 8, 8, 22, 22; 9, 9, 21, 21; 10, 10, 20, 20; 11, 11, 19, 19; 12, 12, 18, 18; 13, 13, 17, 17; 14, 14, 16, 16; and 15, 15, 15, 15 (making a square).
Draw nine rectangles, with the following dimensions:1 by 172 by 163 by 154 by 145 by 136 by 127 by 118 by 109 by 9If you want to get the jump on the next topic coming up in math, thenwhile you're drawing these rectangles, notice that even though theyall have the same perimeter, they all have different areas.
Rectangles and circles.Rectangles and circles.Rectangles and circles.Rectangles and circles.
Yes, I could draw three rectangles with 12 units, so long as the perimeter of the rectangles sum up to 12. You're probably asking for integer lengths, though. A square is a special type of rectangle where all the sides are the same length, so I could have 3 squares with a side length of 1 unit, which gives 3x(1x4)=12 units.
yes because it is not always true and so it could and may not depending how their draw it or write it and it is sometimes true and sometimes not true.
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Its pretty much 11 rectangles in one.
Draw nine rectangles, with the following dimensions:1 by 172 by 163 by 154 by 145 by 136 by 127 by 118 by 109 by 9If you want to get the jump on the next topic coming up in math, thenwhile you're drawing these rectangles, notice that even though theyall have the same perimeter, they all have different areas.
Just draw a square. Squares are rectangles.
Rectangles and circles.Rectangles and circles.Rectangles and circles.Rectangles and circles.
Three objects humans can draw are circles, rectangles, and hexagons.
Yes, I could draw three rectangles with 12 units, so long as the perimeter of the rectangles sum up to 12. You're probably asking for integer lengths, though. A square is a special type of rectangle where all the sides are the same length, so I could have 3 squares with a side length of 1 unit, which gives 3x(1x4)=12 units.
You could draw in the two diagonals (from corner to opposite corner). You could draw two perpendicular lines to develop four squares inside the existing square. You could draw three parallel lines to develop four equally-sized rectangles within the square.
yes because it is not always true and so it could and may not depending how their draw it or write it and it is sometimes true and sometimes not true.
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There are an infinite number of lengths and widths that can be multiplied to get to 60 square units. 1 x 60 4 x 15 2.5 x 24 0.1 x 600 5 x 12 0.5 x 120 etc. etc.
Draw as many rectangles as the whole number you are multiplying by. Then, draw the fraction you are multiplying by in all of the rectangles. Shade in the top number in the fraction [numerator] in your rectangles. Count all the shaded in parts of all your rectangles. Leave the bottom number of your fraction [denominator] the same and put the number you got when you added the shaded parts of the rectangles on top as your denominator of the fraction. That is your answer!
the way to draw the Canadian flag is two rectangles one on the left and one on the right then u connect the two rectangles togetherand then u draw a maple leaf in the midle