11 Perimeter and Area
11 Perimeter and Area
11 Perimeter and Area
11.1 INTRODUCTION
In Class VI, you have already learnt perimeters of plane figures and areas of squares and
rectangles. Perimeter is the distance around a closed figure while area is the part of plane or
region occupied by the closed figure.
In this class, you will learn about perimeters and areas of a few more plane figures.
TRY THESE
What would you need to find, area or perimeter, to answer the following?
1. How much space does a blackboard occupy?
2. What is the length of a wire required to fence a rectangular flower bed?
3. What distance would you cover by taking two rounds of a triangular park?
4. How much plastic sheet do you need to cover a rectangular swimming pool?
Do you remember,
Perimeter of a regular polygon = number of sides × length of one side
Perimeter of a square = 4 × side
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Perimeter of a rectangle = 2 × (l + b)
Area of a rectangle = l × b, Area of a square = side × side
Tanya needed a square of side 4 cm for completing a collage. She had a
rectangular sheet of length 28 cm and breadth 21 cm (Fig 11. 1). She cuts off
Fig 11.1 a square of side 4 cm from the rectangular sheet. Her friend saw the remaining
A D sheet (Fig 11.2) and asked Tanya, “Has the perimeter of the sheet increased
or decreased now?”
Has the total length of side AD increased after cutting off the square?
Has the area increased or decreased?
B Fig 11.2 C
Tanya cuts off one more square from the opposite side (Fig 11.3).
A D
Will the perimeter of the remaining sheet increase further?
Will the area increase or decrease further?
So, what can we infer from this?
B Fig 11.3
C It is clear that the increase of perimeter need not lead to increase in area.
TRY THESE
1. Experiment with several such shapes and cut-outs. You might find it useful to draw
these shapes on squared sheets and compute their areas and perimeters.
You have seen that increase in perimeter does not mean that area will also increase.
2. Give two examples where the area increases as the perimeter increases.
3. Give two examples where the area does not increase when perimeter increases.
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It is given that,
The area of the rectangle = The area of the square
Area of the rectangle = 1600 cm2, breadth of the rectangle = 25 cm.
Area of the rectangle = l × b
or 1600 = l × 25
1600
or =l or l= 64 cm
25
So, the length of rectangle is 64 cm.
Perimeter of the rectangle = 2 (l + b) = 2 (64 + 25) cm
= 2 × 89 cm = 178 cm
So, the perimeter of the rectangle is 178 cm even though its area is the same as that of
the square.
EXERCISE 11.1
1. The length and the breadth of a rectangular piece of land are 500 m and 300 m
respectively. Find
(i) its area (ii) the cost of the land, if 1 m2 of the land costs 10,000.
2. Find the area of a square park whose perimeter is 320 m.
3. Find the breadth of a rectangular plot of land, if its area is 440 m2 and the length is
22 m. Also find its perimeter.
4. The perimeter of a rectangular sheet is 100 cm. If the length is 35 cm, find its breadth.
Also find the area.
5. The area of a square park is the same as of a rectangular park. If the side of the
square park is 60 m and the length of the rectangular park is 90 m, find the breadth of
the rectangular park.
6. A wire is in the shape of a rectangle. Its length is 40 cm and breadth is 22 cm. If the
same wire is rebent in the shape of a square, what will be the measure of each side.
Also find which shape encloses more area?
7. The perimeter of a rectangle is 130 cm. If the breadth of the rectangle is
30 cm, find its length. Also find the area of the rectangle.
8. A door of length 2 m and breadth 1m is fitted in a wall. The length of the
wall is 4.5 m and the breadth is 3.6 m (Fig11.6). Find the cost of white
Fig 11.6 washing the wall, if the rate of white washing the wall is 20 per m2.
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TRY THESE
Each of the following rectangles of length 6 cm and breadth 4 cm is composed of
congruent polygons. Find the area of each polygon.
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Fig 11.12
Find the areas of the parallelograms by counting the squares enclosed within the figures
and also find the perimeters by measuring the sides.
Complete the following table:
You will find that all these parallelograms have equal areas but different perimeters. Now,
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Fig 11.13
Find the perimeter and area of each of these parallelograms. Analyse your results.
You will find that these parallelograms have different areas but equal perimeters.
To find the area of a parallelogram, you need to know only the base and the
corresponding height of the parallelogram.
TRY THESE
Find the area of following parallelograms:
(i) (ii)
(iii) In a parallelogram ABCD, AB = 7.2 cm and the perpendicular from C on AB is 4.5 cm.
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TRY THESE
1. Try the above activity with different types of triangles.
2. Take different parallelograms. Divide each of the parallelograms into two triangles by
cutting along any of its diagonals. Are the triangles congruent?
In the figure (Fig 11.15) all the triangles are on the base AB = 6 cm.
What can you say about the height of each of the triangles
corresponding to the base AB?
Can we say all the triangles are equal in area? Yes.
Are the triangles congruent also? No.
We conclude that all the congruent triangles are equal in
6 cm
area but the triangles equal in area need not be congruent. Fig 11.15
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D B 6 cm C
EXAMPLE 6 One of the sides and the corresponding height of a
parallelogram are 4 cm and 3 cm respectively. Find the
area of the parallelogram (Fig 11.17).
Fig 11.16
SOLUTION Given that length of base (b) = 4 cm, height (h) = 3 cm
Area of the parallelogram = b × h
= 4 cm × 3 cm = 12 cm2
3 cm
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4c
=x
4
D C
Therefore, x = 4.5 cm 6 cm
Thus, the height corresponding to base AD is 4.5 cm. Fig 11.19
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S
(i) Fig 11.20 (ii)
SOLUTION
1 1
(i) Area of triangle = bh = × QR × PS
2 2
1
= × 4 cm × 2 cm = 4 cm2
2
1 1
(ii) Area of triangle = bh = × MN × LO
2 2
1
= × 3 cm × 2 cm = 3 cm2
2
EXAMPLE 10 Find BC, if the area of the triangle ABC is 36 cm2 and the height AD is
3 cm (Fig 11.21).
SOLUTION Height = 3 cm, Area = 36 cm2
1
Area of the triangle ABC = bh
2
1 36 × 2
or 36 = ×b×3 i.e., b = = 24 cm Fig 11.21
2 3
So, BC = 24 cm
EXAMPLE 11 In ∆PQR, PR = 8 cm, QR = 4 cm and PL = 5 cm (Fig 11.22). Find:
(i) the area of the ∆PQR (ii) QM
SOLUTION
(i) QR = base = 4 cm, PL = height = 5 cm
1
Area of the triangle PQR = bh
2
1
= × 4 cm × 5 cm = 10 cm2
2 Fig 11.22
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EXERCISE 11.2
1. Find the area of each of the following parallelograms:
(d) (e)
2. Find the area of each of the following triangles:
a. 20 cm 246 cm2
b. 15 cm 154.5 cm2
c. 8.4 cm 48.72 cm2
d. 15.6 cm 16.38 cm2
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15 cm ______ 87 cm2
11.5 CIRCLES
A racing track is semi-circular at both ends (Fig 11.27).
Can you find the distance covered by an athlete if he takes two rounds
of a racing track? We need to find a method to find the distances around
when a shape is circular.
Fig 11.27
11.5.1 Circumference of a Circle
Tanya cut different cards, in curved shape from a cardboard. She wants to put lace around
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to decorate these cards. What length of the lace does she require for each? (Fig 11.28)
DO THIS
Take a bottle cap, a bangle or any other circular object and find the circumference.
Now, can you find the distance covered by the athlete on the track by this method?
Still, it will be very difficult to find the distance around the track or any other circular
object by measuring through string. Moreover, the measurement will not be accurate.
So, we need some formula for this, as we have for rectilinear figures or shapes.
Let us see if there is any relationship between the diameter and the circumference of
the circles.
Consider the following table: Draw six circles of different radii and find their circumference
by using string. Also find the ratio of the circumference to the diameter.
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44
2. 7.0 cm 14.0 cm 44.0 cm = 3.14
14
66
3. 10.5 cm 21.0 cm 66.0 cm = 3.14
21
132
4. 21.0 cm 42.0 cm 132.0 cm = 3.14
42
32
5. 5.0 cm 10.0 cm 32.0 cm = 3.2
10
94
6. 15.0 cm 30.0 cm 94.0 cm = 3.13
30
What do you infer from the above table? Is this ratio approximately the same? Yes.
Can you say that the circumference of a circle is always more than three times its
diameter? Yes.
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This ratio is a constant and is denoted by π (pi). Its approximate value is or 3.14.
7
C
So, we can say that = π , where ‘C’ represents circumference of the circle and ‘d ’
d
its diameter.
or C = πd
We know that diameter (d) of a circle is twice the radius (r) i.e., d = 2r
So, C = πd = π × 2r or C = 2πr.
TRY THESE
In Fig 11.31,
(a) Which square has the larger perimeter?
(b) Which is larger, perimeter of smaller square or the
circumference of the circle? Fig 11.31
DO THIS
Take one each of quarter plate and half plate. Roll once each of these on
a table-top. Which plate covers more distance in one complete revolution?
Which plate will take less number of revolutions to cover the length of the
table-top?
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1 22
= × × 14 cm = 22 cm
2 7
Circumference of each of the semicircles is 22 cm
Therefore, perimeter of the given figure = 4 × 22 cm = 88 cm Fig 11.32
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(i) (ii)
Fig 11.36
Fig 11.35
Arrange the separate pieces as shown, in Fig 11.36, which is roughly a parallelogram.
The more sectors we have, the nearer we reach an appropriate parallelogram.
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As done above if we divide the circle in 64 sectors, and arrange these sectors. It
gives nearly a rectangle (Fig 11.37).
Fig 11.37
What is the breadth of this rectangle? The breadth of this rectangle is the radius of the
circle, i.e., ‘r’.
As the whole circle is divided into 64 sectors and on each side we have 32 sectors, the
length of the rectangle is the length of the 32 sectors, which is half of the circumference.
(Fig 11.37)
Area of the circle = Area of rectangle thus formed = l × b
1
= (Half of circumference) × radius = × 2πr × r = πr2
2
So, the area of the circle = πr2
TRY THESE
Draw circles of different radii on a graph paper. Find the area by counting the
number of squares. Also find the area by using the formula. Compare the two answers.
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SOLUTION
(a) Radius of the larger circle = 10 cm
So, area of the larger circle = πr 2
= 3.14 × 10 × 10 = 314 cm2
(b) Radius of the smaller circle = 4 cm
Area of the smaller circle = πr 2
= 3.14 × 4 × 4 = 50.24 cm2
(c) Area of the shaded region = (314 – 50.24) cm2 = 263.76 cm2
EXERCISE 11.3
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1. Find the circumference of the circles with the following radius: (Take π = )
7
(a) 14 cm (b) 28 mm (c) 21 cm
2. Find the area of the following circles, given that:
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(a) radius = 14 mm (Take π = ) (b) diameter = 49 m
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(c) radius = 5 cm
3. If the circumference of a circular sheet is 154 m, find its radius. Also find the area of
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the sheet. (Take π = )
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4. A gardener wants to fence a circular garden of diameter 21m. Find the length of the
rope he needs to purchase, if he makes 2 rounds of fence. Also find the cost of the
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rope, if it costs 4 per meter. (Take π = )
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5. From a circular sheet of radius 4 cm, a circle of radius 3 cm is removed. Find the area
of the remaining sheet. (Take π = 3.14)
6. Saima wants to put a lace on the edge of a circular table cover of diameter 1.5 m.
Find the length of the lace required and also find its cost if one meter of the lace costs
15. (Take π = 3.14)
7. Find the perimeter of the adjoining figure, which is a semicircle including
its diameter.
8. Find the cost of polishing a circular table-top of diameter 1.6 m, if
the rate of polishing is 15/m2. (Take π = 3.14)
9. Shazli took a wire of length 44 cm and bent it into the shape of a circle.
Find the radius of that circle. Also find its area. If the same wire is bent into the shape
of a square, what will be the length of each of its sides? Which figure encloses more
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area, the circle or the square? (Take π = )
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10. From a circular card sheet of radius 14 cm, two circles of radius 3.5 cm and a
rectangle of length 3 cm and breadth 1cm are removed. (as shown in the adjoining
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figure). Find the area of the remaining sheet. (Take π = )
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11. A circle of radius 2 cm is cut out from a square piece of an aluminium sheet of side
6 cm. What is the area of the left over aluminium sheet? (Take π = 3.14)
12. The circumference of a circle is 31.4 cm. Find the radius and the area of the circle?
(Take π = 3.14)
13. A circular flower bed is surrounded by a path 4 m wide. The diameter of the flower
bed is 66 m. What is the area of this path? (π = 3.14)
66m
14. A circular flower garden has an area of 314 m2. A sprinkler at the centre of the
garden can cover an area that has a radius of 12 m. Will the sprinkler water the entire
garden? (Take π = 3.14)
15. Find the circumference of the inner and the outer circles, shown in the adjoining figure?
(Take π = 3.14)
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16. How many times a wheel of radius 28 cm must rotate to go 352 m? (Take π = )
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17. The minute hand of a circular clock is 15 cm long. How far does the tip of the minute
hand move in 1 hour. (Take π = 3.14)
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But when we convert a unit of area to a larger unit, the number of larger units will be
smaller.
1000 2
For example, 1000 cm2 = m = 0.1 m2
10000
TRY THESE
Convert the following:
(i) 50 cm2 in mm2 (ii) 2 ha in m2 (iii) 10 m2 in cm2 (iv) 1000 cm2 in m2
11.7 APPLICATIONS
You must have observed that quite often, in gardens or parks, some space is left all around
in the form of path or in between as cross paths. A framed picture has some space left all
around it.
We need to find the areas of such pathways or borders when
we want to find the cost of making them. P 2.5 m Q
A 45 m B
EXAMPLE 20 A rectangular park is 45 m long and 30 m wide.
A path 2.5 m wide is constructed outside the
2.5 m
park. Find the area of the path. 30 m
SOLUTION Let ABCD represent the rectangular park and
the shaded region represent the path 2.5 m wide. D C
To find the area of the path, we need to find (Area of rectangle S R
PQRS – Area of rectangle ABCD).
We have, PQ = (45 + 2.5 + 2.5) m = 50 m
PS = (30 + 2.5 + 2.5) m = 35 m
Area of the rectangle ABCD = l× b = 45 × 30 m2 = 1350 m2
Area of the rectangle PQRS = l× b = 50 × 35 m2 = 1750 m2
Area of the path = Area of the rectangle PQRS − Area of the rectangle ABCD
= (1750 − 1350) m2 = 400 m2
EXAMPLE 21 A path 5 m wide runs along inside a square park of side 100
100 m. Find the area of the path. Also find the cost of A B
cementing it at the rate of 250 per 10 m2.
P Q
SOLUTION Let ABCD be the square park of side 100 m. The
shaded region represents the path 5 m wide.
PQ = 100 – (5 + 5) = 90 m
Area of square ABCD = (side)2 = (100)2 m2 = 10000 m2 S R
Area of square PQRS = (side)2 = (90)2 m2 = 8100 m2
Therefore, area of the path = (10000 − 8100) m2 = 1900 m2
Cost of cementing 10 m2 = 250 D C
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250
Therefore, cost of cementing 1 m2 =
10
250
So, cost of cementing 1900 m2 = × 1900 = 47,500
10
EXAMPLE 22 Two cross roads, each of width 5 m, run at right angles through the centre
of a rectangular park of length 70 m and breadth 45 m and parallel to its
sides. Find the area of the roads. Also find the cost of constructing the
roads at the rate of 105 per m2.
SOLUTION Area of the cross roads is the area of shaded portion, i.e., the area of
the rectangle PQRS and the area of the rectangle EFGH. But while
doing this, the area of the square KLMN is taken twice,
which is to be subtracted.
Now, PQ = 5 m and PS = 45 m
EH = 5 m and EF = 70 m
KL = 5 m and KN = 5 m
Area of the path = Area of the rectangle PQRS + area of
the rectangle EFGH – Area of the square KLMN
= PS × PQ + EF × EH – KL × KN
= (45 × 5 + 70 × 5 − 5 × 5) m2
= (225 + 350 − 25) m2 = 550 m2
Cost of constructing the path = 105 × 550 = 57,750
EXERCISE 11.4
1. A garden is 90 m long and 75 m broad. A path 5 m wide is to be built outside and
around it. Find the area of the path. Also find the area of the garden in hectare.
2. A 3 m wide path runs outside and around a rectangular park of length 125 m and
breadth 65 m. Find the area of the path.
3. A picture is painted on a cardboard 8 cm long and 5 cm wide such that there is a
margin of 1.5 cm along each of its sides. Find the total area of the margin.
4. A verandah of width 2.25 m is constructed all along outside a room which is 5.5 m
long and 4 m wide. Find:
(i) the area of the verandah.
(ii) the cost of cementing the floor of the verandah at the rate of 200 per m2.
5. A path 1 m wide is built along the border and inside a square garden of side 30 m. Find:
(i) the area of the path
(ii) the cost of planting grass in the remaining portion of the garden at the rate of
40 per m2.
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6. Two cross roads, each of width 10 m, cut at right angles through the centre of a
rectangular park of length 700 m and breadth 300 m and parallel to its sides. Find the
area of the roads. Also find the area of the park excluding cross roads. Give the
answer in hectares.
7. Through a rectangular field of length 90 m and breadth 60 m, two roads are
constructed which are parallel to the sides and cut each other at right angles through
the centre of the fields. If the width of each road is 3 m, find
(i) the area covered by the roads.
(ii) the cost of constructing the roads at the rate of 110 per m2.
8. Pragya wrapped a cord around a circular pipe of radius 4 cm (adjoining figure) and
cut off the length required of the cord. Then she wrapped it around a square box of
side 4 cm (also shown). Did she have any cord left? (π = 3.14)
9. The adjoining figure represents a rectangular lawn with a circular flower bed in the
middle. Find:
(i) the area of the whole land (ii) the area of the flower bed
(iii) the area of the lawn excluding the area of the flower bed
(iv) the circumference of the flower bed.
10. In the following figures, find the area of the shaded portions:
(i) (ii)
11. Find the area of the quadrilateral ABCD.
Here, AC = 22 cm, BM = 3 cm,
DN = 3 cm, and
BM ⊥ AC, DN ⊥ AC
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1
= × base × height
2
5. The distance around a circular region is known as its circumference.
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Circumference of a circle = πd, where d is the diameter of a circle and =
7
or 3.14 (approximately).
6. Area of a circle = πr2, where r is the radius of the circle.
7. Based on the conversion of units for lengths, studied earlier, the units of areas can
also be converted:
1 cm2 = 100 mm2, 1 m2 = 10000 cm2 , 1 hectare = 10000 m2.
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