Side lengths from overlapping rectangles
3.MD.D.84.MD.A.33.OA.D.8
Generated variants — 8
Rectangle A and square B overlap as shown below. The perimeter of rectangle A is . What is the side length of square B, in ?
Figure description: Rectangle A sits at the upper left and square B sits at the lower right, overlapping at one corner so that the overlap is a small shaded rectangle. The top side of rectangle A is labeled . Inside the overlap, the part belonging to rectangle A has a vertical length of , and the part belonging to square B has a vertical length of .
Show solution
Understand
Rectangle A (top-left) and square B (bottom-right) overlap at one corner, and the overlap is a small shaded rectangle. Rectangle A's perimeter is 22 cm and its top side is 6 cm. Inside the overlap, the vertical part belonging to A is 4 cm and the vertical part belonging to B is 4 cm. I must find the side length of square B.
- Rectangle A has perimeter 22 cm.
- The top side of rectangle A is 6 cm, so its width is 6 cm.
- Along the overlap, A's vertical part is 4 cm.
- Along B's left side, the part below A's bottom edge is 4 cm.
- B is a square, so all its sides are equal.
- The side length of square B, in cm.
- Opposite sides of a rectangle are equal; all sides of a square are equal.
- B's left side runs straight down: the 4 cm overlap part and the 4 cm part below A together make one full side of B.
Plan
#11 Work Backwards · also uses: #1 Draw a Diagram#7 Identify Subproblems
The width plus the perimeter let me work backwards to A's height, but the height is not even needed for B. The real key is the diagram: B's left side is split by A's bottom edge into a top part inside the overlap and a bottom part below A, and adding those two pieces gives B's full side.
Execute
Review
B's side 8 cm is longer than the 4 cm bottom piece and the 4 cm overlap piece, which it must be since it contains both. It is comparable in size to rectangle A's 6 cm and 5 cm sides, so two figures of this scale overlapping at a corner is sensible.
Convert to a tiny equation (tool 13): let s be B's side; the side equals overlap (4) plus the protruding part (4), so s = 4 + 4 = 8 cm, matching the diagram reasoning.
Standards · min grade 4
3.MD.D.8Solve real-world problems involving perimeters of polygons — Working backwards from A's 22 cm perimeter and 6 cm width to its 5 cm height.3.OA.D.8Solve two-step word problems using four operations within 100 — Combining the perimeter step and the side-splitting step to reach the answer.4.MD.A.3Apply area and perimeter formulas for rectangles in real-world problems — Reasoning about the square's equal side built from the 4 cm and 4 cm pieces.
Rectangle A and square B overlap as shown below. The perimeter of rectangle A is . What is the side length of square B, in ?
Figure description: Rectangle A sits at the upper left and square B sits at the lower right, overlapping at one corner so that the overlap is a small shaded rectangle. The top side of rectangle A is labeled . Inside the overlap, the part belonging to rectangle A has a vertical length of , and the part belonging to square B has a vertical length of .
Show solution
Understand
Rectangle A (top-left) and square B (bottom-right) overlap at one corner, and the overlap is a small shaded rectangle. Rectangle A's perimeter is 30 cm and its top side is 9 cm. Inside the overlap, the vertical part belonging to A is 5 cm and the vertical part belonging to B is 2 cm. I must find the side length of square B.
- Rectangle A has perimeter 30 cm.
- The top side of rectangle A is 9 cm, so its width is 9 cm.
- Along the overlap, A's vertical part is 5 cm.
- Along B's left side, the part below A's bottom edge is 2 cm.
- B is a square, so all its sides are equal.
- The side length of square B, in cm.
- Opposite sides of a rectangle are equal; all sides of a square are equal.
- B's left side runs straight down: the 5 cm overlap part and the 2 cm part below A together make one full side of B.
Plan
#11 Work Backwards · also uses: #1 Draw a Diagram#7 Identify Subproblems
The width plus the perimeter let me work backwards to A's height, but the height is not even needed for B. The real key is the diagram: B's left side is split by A's bottom edge into a top part inside the overlap and a bottom part below A, and adding those two pieces gives B's full side.
Execute
Review
B's side 7 cm is longer than the 2 cm bottom piece and the 5 cm overlap piece, which it must be since it contains both. It is comparable in size to rectangle A's 9 cm and 6 cm sides, so two figures of this scale overlapping at a corner is sensible.
Convert to a tiny equation (tool 13): let s be B's side; the side equals overlap (5) plus the protruding part (2), so s = 5 + 2 = 7 cm, matching the diagram reasoning.
Standards · min grade 4
3.MD.D.8Solve real-world problems involving perimeters of polygons — Working backwards from A's 30 cm perimeter and 9 cm width to its 6 cm height.3.OA.D.8Solve two-step word problems using four operations within 100 — Combining the perimeter step and the side-splitting step to reach the answer.4.MD.A.3Apply area and perimeter formulas for rectangles in real-world problems — Reasoning about the square's equal side built from the 5 cm and 2 cm pieces.
Rectangle A and square B overlap as shown below. The perimeter of rectangle A is . What is the side length of square B, in ?
Figure description: Rectangle A sits at the upper left and square B sits at the lower right, overlapping at one corner so that the overlap is a small shaded rectangle. The top side of rectangle A is labeled . Inside the overlap, the part belonging to rectangle A has a vertical length of , and the part belonging to square B has a vertical length of .
Show solution
Understand
Rectangle A (top-left) and square B (bottom-right) overlap at one corner, and the overlap is a small shaded rectangle. Rectangle A's perimeter is 50 cm and its top side is 15 cm. Inside the overlap, the vertical part belonging to A is 6 cm and the vertical part belonging to B is 4 cm. I must find the side length of square B.
- Rectangle A has perimeter 50 cm.
- The top side of rectangle A is 15 cm, so its width is 15 cm.
- Along the overlap, A's vertical part is 6 cm.
- Along B's left side, the part below A's bottom edge is 4 cm.
- B is a square, so all its sides are equal.
- The side length of square B, in cm.
- Opposite sides of a rectangle are equal; all sides of a square are equal.
- B's left side runs straight down: the 6 cm overlap part and the 4 cm part below A together make one full side of B.
Plan
#11 Work Backwards · also uses: #1 Draw a Diagram#7 Identify Subproblems
The width plus the perimeter let me work backwards to A's height, but the height is not even needed for B. The real key is the diagram: B's left side is split by A's bottom edge into a top part inside the overlap and a bottom part below A, and adding those two pieces gives B's full side.
Execute
Review
B's side 10 cm is longer than the 4 cm bottom piece and the 6 cm overlap piece, which it must be since it contains both. It is comparable in size to rectangle A's 15 cm and 10 cm sides, so two figures of this scale overlapping at a corner is sensible.
Convert to a tiny equation (tool 13): let s be B's side; the side equals overlap (6) plus the protruding part (4), so s = 6 + 4 = 10 cm, matching the diagram reasoning.
Standards · min grade 4
3.MD.D.8Solve real-world problems involving perimeters of polygons — Working backwards from A's 50 cm perimeter and 15 cm width to its 10 cm height.3.OA.D.8Solve two-step word problems using four operations within 100 — Combining the perimeter step and the side-splitting step to reach the answer.4.MD.A.3Apply area and perimeter formulas for rectangles in real-world problems — Reasoning about the square's equal side built from the 6 cm and 4 cm pieces.
Rectangle A and square B overlap as shown below. The perimeter of rectangle A is . What is the side length of square B, in ?
Figure description: Rectangle A sits at the upper left and square B sits at the lower right, overlapping at one corner so that the overlap is a small shaded rectangle. The top side of rectangle A is labeled . Inside the overlap, the part belonging to rectangle A has a vertical length of , and the part belonging to square B has a vertical length of .
Show solution
Understand
Rectangle A (top-left) and square B (bottom-right) overlap at one corner, and the overlap is a small shaded rectangle. Rectangle A's perimeter is 26 cm and its top side is 8 cm. Inside the overlap, the vertical part belonging to A is 3 cm and the vertical part belonging to B is 4 cm. I must find the side length of square B.
- Rectangle A has perimeter 26 cm.
- The top side of rectangle A is 8 cm, so its width is 8 cm.
- Along the overlap, A's vertical part is 3 cm.
- Along B's left side, the part below A's bottom edge is 4 cm.
- B is a square, so all its sides are equal.
- The side length of square B, in cm.
- Opposite sides of a rectangle are equal; all sides of a square are equal.
- B's left side runs straight down: the 3 cm overlap part and the 4 cm part below A together make one full side of B.
Plan
#11 Work Backwards · also uses: #1 Draw a Diagram#7 Identify Subproblems
The width plus the perimeter let me work backwards to A's height, but the height is not even needed for B. The real key is the diagram: B's left side is split by A's bottom edge into a top part inside the overlap and a bottom part below A, and adding those two pieces gives B's full side.
Execute
Review
B's side 7 cm is longer than the 4 cm bottom piece and the 3 cm overlap piece, which it must be since it contains both. It is comparable in size to rectangle A's 8 cm and 5 cm sides, so two figures of this scale overlapping at a corner is sensible.
Convert to a tiny equation (tool 13): let s be B's side; the side equals overlap (3) plus the protruding part (4), so s = 3 + 4 = 7 cm, matching the diagram reasoning.
Standards · min grade 4
3.MD.D.8Solve real-world problems involving perimeters of polygons — Working backwards from A's 26 cm perimeter and 8 cm width to its 5 cm height.3.OA.D.8Solve two-step word problems using four operations within 100 — Combining the perimeter step and the side-splitting step to reach the answer.4.MD.A.3Apply area and perimeter formulas for rectangles in real-world problems — Reasoning about the square's equal side built from the 3 cm and 4 cm pieces.
Rectangle A and square B overlap as shown below. The perimeter of rectangle A is . What is the side length of square B, in ?
Figure description: Rectangle A sits at the upper left and square B sits at the lower right, overlapping at one corner so that the overlap is a small shaded rectangle. The top side of rectangle A is labeled . Inside the overlap, the part belonging to rectangle A has a vertical length of , and the part belonging to square B has a vertical length of .
Show solution
Understand
Rectangle A (top-left) and square B (bottom-right) overlap at one corner, and the overlap is a small shaded rectangle. Rectangle A's perimeter is 40 cm and its top side is 12 cm. Inside the overlap, the vertical part belonging to A is 3 cm and the vertical part belonging to B is 6 cm. I must find the side length of square B.
- Rectangle A has perimeter 40 cm.
- The top side of rectangle A is 12 cm, so its width is 12 cm.
- Along the overlap, A's vertical part is 3 cm.
- Along B's left side, the part below A's bottom edge is 6 cm.
- B is a square, so all its sides are equal.
- The side length of square B, in cm.
- Opposite sides of a rectangle are equal; all sides of a square are equal.
- B's left side runs straight down: the 3 cm overlap part and the 6 cm part below A together make one full side of B.
Plan
#11 Work Backwards · also uses: #1 Draw a Diagram#7 Identify Subproblems
The width plus the perimeter let me work backwards to A's height, but the height is not even needed for B. The real key is the diagram: B's left side is split by A's bottom edge into a top part inside the overlap and a bottom part below A, and adding those two pieces gives B's full side.
Execute
Review
B's side 9 cm is longer than the 6 cm bottom piece and the 3 cm overlap piece, which it must be since it contains both. It is comparable in size to rectangle A's 12 cm and 8 cm sides, so two figures of this scale overlapping at a corner is sensible.
Convert to a tiny equation (tool 13): let s be B's side; the side equals overlap (3) plus the protruding part (6), so s = 3 + 6 = 9 cm, matching the diagram reasoning.
Standards · min grade 4
3.MD.D.8Solve real-world problems involving perimeters of polygons — Working backwards from A's 40 cm perimeter and 12 cm width to its 8 cm height.3.OA.D.8Solve two-step word problems using four operations within 100 — Combining the perimeter step and the side-splitting step to reach the answer.4.MD.A.3Apply area and perimeter formulas for rectangles in real-world problems — Reasoning about the square's equal side built from the 3 cm and 6 cm pieces.
Rectangle A and square B overlap as shown below. The perimeter of rectangle A is . What is the side length of square B, in ?
Figure description: Rectangle A sits at the upper left and square B sits at the lower right, overlapping at one corner so that the overlap is a small shaded rectangle. The top side of rectangle A is labeled . Inside the overlap, the part belonging to rectangle A has a vertical length of , and the part belonging to square B has a vertical length of .
Show solution
Understand
Rectangle A (top-left) and square B (bottom-right) overlap at one corner, and the overlap is a small shaded rectangle. Rectangle A's perimeter is 32 cm and its top side is 10 cm. Inside the overlap, the vertical part belonging to A is 2 cm and the vertical part belonging to B is 5 cm. I must find the side length of square B.
- Rectangle A has perimeter 32 cm.
- The top side of rectangle A is 10 cm, so its width is 10 cm.
- Along the overlap, A's vertical part is 2 cm.
- Along B's left side, the part below A's bottom edge is 5 cm.
- B is a square, so all its sides are equal.
- The side length of square B, in cm.
- Opposite sides of a rectangle are equal; all sides of a square are equal.
- B's left side runs straight down: the 2 cm overlap part and the 5 cm part below A together make one full side of B.
Plan
#11 Work Backwards · also uses: #1 Draw a Diagram#7 Identify Subproblems
The width plus the perimeter let me work backwards to A's height, but the height is not even needed for B. The real key is the diagram: B's left side is split by A's bottom edge into a top part inside the overlap and a bottom part below A, and adding those two pieces gives B's full side.
Execute
Review
B's side 7 cm is longer than the 5 cm bottom piece and the 2 cm overlap piece, which it must be since it contains both. It is comparable in size to rectangle A's 10 cm and 6 cm sides, so two figures of this scale overlapping at a corner is sensible.
Convert to a tiny equation (tool 13): let s be B's side; the side equals overlap (2) plus the protruding part (5), so s = 2 + 5 = 7 cm, matching the diagram reasoning.
Standards · min grade 4
3.MD.D.8Solve real-world problems involving perimeters of polygons — Working backwards from A's 32 cm perimeter and 10 cm width to its 6 cm height.3.OA.D.8Solve two-step word problems using four operations within 100 — Combining the perimeter step and the side-splitting step to reach the answer.4.MD.A.3Apply area and perimeter formulas for rectangles in real-world problems — Reasoning about the square's equal side built from the 2 cm and 5 cm pieces.
Rectangle A and square B overlap as shown below. The perimeter of rectangle A is . What is the side length of square B, in ?
Figure description: Rectangle A sits at the upper left and square B sits at the lower right, overlapping at one corner so that the overlap is a small shaded rectangle. The top side of rectangle A is labeled . Inside the overlap, the part belonging to rectangle A has a vertical length of , and the part belonging to square B has a vertical length of .
Show solution
Understand
Rectangle A (top-left) and square B (bottom-right) overlap at one corner, and the overlap is a small shaded rectangle. Rectangle A's perimeter is 24 cm and its top side is 7 cm. Inside the overlap, the vertical part belonging to A is 1 cm and the vertical part belonging to B is 8 cm. I must find the side length of square B.
- Rectangle A has perimeter 24 cm.
- The top side of rectangle A is 7 cm, so its width is 7 cm.
- Along the overlap, A's vertical part is 1 cm.
- Along B's left side, the part below A's bottom edge is 8 cm.
- B is a square, so all its sides are equal.
- The side length of square B, in cm.
- Opposite sides of a rectangle are equal; all sides of a square are equal.
- B's left side runs straight down: the 1 cm overlap part and the 8 cm part below A together make one full side of B.
Plan
#11 Work Backwards · also uses: #1 Draw a Diagram#7 Identify Subproblems
The width plus the perimeter let me work backwards to A's height, but the height is not even needed for B. The real key is the diagram: B's left side is split by A's bottom edge into a top part inside the overlap and a bottom part below A, and adding those two pieces gives B's full side.
Execute
Review
B's side 9 cm is longer than the 8 cm bottom piece and the 1 cm overlap piece, which it must be since it contains both. It is comparable in size to rectangle A's 7 cm and 5 cm sides, so two figures of this scale overlapping at a corner is sensible.
Convert to a tiny equation (tool 13): let s be B's side; the side equals overlap (1) plus the protruding part (8), so s = 1 + 8 = 9 cm, matching the diagram reasoning.
Standards · min grade 4
3.MD.D.8Solve real-world problems involving perimeters of polygons — Working backwards from A's 24 cm perimeter and 7 cm width to its 5 cm height.3.OA.D.8Solve two-step word problems using four operations within 100 — Combining the perimeter step and the side-splitting step to reach the answer.4.MD.A.3Apply area and perimeter formulas for rectangles in real-world problems — Reasoning about the square's equal side built from the 1 cm and 8 cm pieces.
Rectangle A and square B overlap as shown below. The perimeter of rectangle A is . What is the side length of square B, in ?
Figure description: Rectangle A sits at the upper left and square B sits at the lower right, overlapping at one corner so that the overlap is a small shaded rectangle. The top side of rectangle A is labeled . Inside the overlap, the part belonging to rectangle A has a vertical length of , and the part belonging to square B has a vertical length of .
Show solution
Understand
Rectangle A (top-left) and square B (bottom-right) overlap at one corner, and the overlap is a small shaded rectangle. Rectangle A's perimeter is 18 cm and its top side is 5 cm. Inside the overlap, the vertical part belonging to A is 2 cm and the vertical part belonging to B is 3 cm. I must find the side length of square B.
- Rectangle A has perimeter 18 cm.
- The top side of rectangle A is 5 cm, so its width is 5 cm.
- Along the overlap, A's vertical part is 2 cm.
- Along B's left side, the part below A's bottom edge is 3 cm.
- B is a square, so all its sides are equal.
- The side length of square B, in cm.
- Opposite sides of a rectangle are equal; all sides of a square are equal.
- B's left side runs straight down: the 2 cm overlap part and the 3 cm part below A together make one full side of B.
Plan
#11 Work Backwards · also uses: #1 Draw a Diagram#7 Identify Subproblems
The width plus the perimeter let me work backwards to A's height, but the height is not even needed for B. The real key is the diagram: B's left side is split by A's bottom edge into a top part inside the overlap and a bottom part below A, and adding those two pieces gives B's full side.
Execute
Review
B's side 5 cm is longer than the 3 cm bottom piece and the 2 cm overlap piece, which it must be since it contains both. It is comparable in size to rectangle A's 5 cm and 4 cm sides, so two figures of this scale overlapping at a corner is sensible.
Convert to a tiny equation (tool 13): let s be B's side; the side equals overlap (2) plus the protruding part (3), so s = 2 + 3 = 5 cm, matching the diagram reasoning.
Standards · min grade 4
3.MD.D.8Solve real-world problems involving perimeters of polygons — Working backwards from A's 18 cm perimeter and 5 cm width to its 4 cm height.3.OA.D.8Solve two-step word problems using four operations within 100 — Combining the perimeter step and the side-splitting step to reach the answer.4.MD.A.3Apply area and perimeter formulas for rectangles in real-world problems — Reasoning about the square's equal side built from the 2 cm and 3 cm pieces.