Which statement is correct? Congruent figures ____.
- Same Shape And Same Size
Practice related MCQ quizzes and improve step by step.
Which statement is correct? Congruent figures ____.
Which statement is correct? Volume measures ____.
A 20 cm by 15 cm rectangle has a square corner of side 5 cm removed. What is the remaining area?
A 18 cm by 10 cm rectangle has a square corner of side 3 cm removed. What is the remaining area?
A 16 cm by 12 cm rectangle has a square corner of side 4 cm removed. What is the remaining area?
A 14 cm by 10 cm rectangle has a square corner of side 5 cm removed. What is the remaining area?
A 12 cm by 9 cm rectangle has a square corner of side 4 cm removed. What is the remaining area?
A 10 cm by 8 cm rectangle has a square corner of side 3 cm removed. What is the remaining area?
A drawing uses a scale of 1 cm = 5 m. A line on the drawing is 12 cm. What real length does it represent?
A drawing uses a scale of 1 cm = 3 m. A line on the drawing is 10 cm. What real length does it represent?
A drawing uses a scale of 1 cm = 4 m. A line on the drawing is 9 cm. What real length does it represent?
A drawing uses a scale of 1 cm = 6 m. A line on the drawing is 8 cm. What real length does it represent?
A drawing uses a scale of 1 cm = 5 m. A line on the drawing is 7 cm. What real length does it represent?
A drawing uses a scale of 1 cm = 3 m. A line on the drawing is 6 cm. What real length does it represent?
A drawing uses a scale of 1 cm = 2 m. A line on the drawing is 5 cm. What real length does it represent?
A drawing uses a scale of 1 cm = 4 m. A line on the drawing is 3 cm. What real length does it represent?
A map uses a scale of 1 cm = 6 m. A real path is 48 m long. How long should the path be on the map?
A map uses a scale of 1 cm = 5 m. A real path is 45 m long. How long should the path be on the map?
A map uses a scale of 1 cm = 4 m. A real path is 36 m long. How long should the path be on the map?
A map uses a scale of 1 cm = 3 m. A real path is 24 m long. How long should the path be on the map?