Using Linear, Square, and Cubic Measure Appropriately
Learning Outcomes
- Given an item to measure determine whether you would use linear, square, or cubic units
- Calculate perimeter and area of a rectangle
When you measure your height or the length of a garden hose, you use a ruler or tape measure (see below). A tape measure might remind you of a line—you use it for linear measure, which measures length. Inch, foot, yard, mile, centimeter and meter are units of linear measure.
This tape measure measures inches along the top and centimeters along the bottom.




example
For each item, state whether you would use linear, square, or cubic measure: 1. amount of carpeting needed in a room 2. extension cord length 3. amount of sand in a sandbox 4. length of a curtain rod 5. amount of flour in a canister 6. size of the roof of a doghouse. Solution1. You are measuring how much surface the carpet covers, which is the area. | square measure |
2. You are measuring how long the extension cord is, which is the length. | linear measure |
3. You are measuring the volume of the sand. | cubic measure |
4. You are measuring the length of the curtain rod. | linear measure |
5. You are measuring the volume of the flour. | cubic measure |
6. You are measuring the area of the roof. | square measure |
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[ohm_question]146501[/ohm_question]Perimeter and Area
The perimeter is a measure of the distance around a figure. The area is a measure of the surface covered by a figure.
example
Each of two square tiles is [latex]1[/latex] square inch. Two tiles are shown together. 1. What is the perimeter of the figure? 2. What is the area?
Answer:
Solution
1. The perimeter is the distance around the figure. The perimeter is [latex]6[/latex] inches.
2. The area is the surface covered by the figure. There are [latex]2[/latex] square inch tiles so the area is [latex]2[/latex] square inches.
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[ohm_question]146926[/ohm_question]Licenses & Attributions
CC licensed content, Original
- Question ID 146926, 146501. Authored by: Lumen Learning. License: CC BY: Attribution.
CC licensed content, Specific attribution
- Prealgebra. Provided by: OpenStax License: CC BY: Attribution. License terms: Download for free at http://cnx.org/contents/[email protected].