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Sagot :

Step-by-step explanation:

3.

the net of a cylinder looks like a rectangle with two circles attached at opposite ends. we also define a base radius for the cylinder as the radius of the base, and the height of the cylinder as the distance between the bases.

in other words, imagine you cut open a soda can (and leave the top and bottom just a little bit attached - don't cut them off completely).

the mantle turns into a rectangle. and the base and top are two circles. the length of the rectangle is the circumference of one of the circles (2×pi×r), and the width of the rectangle is the height of the original can.

4.

remember what you did when calculating the size of the area of a square ? or a rectangle ?

in each case it is in principle length×width.

and we expressed an area not in units of e.g. cm but in cm², because we simply said how many little squares of 1 unit side length fit into the area.

now, for the volume, we apply the same principle and simply add a third dimension.

we express a volume not in cm² squares but in cm³ cubes, saying how many such little cubes fit inside.

a cube with 5 cm side length has therefore a volume of

5×5×5 = 5³ = 125 cm³ (= 125 little cubes of 1cm side length).

5.

this is simply a box, a 3-dimensional rectangle.

similar to 4. fit the volume we just multiply now so 3 dimensions :

6×7×9 = 378 cm³ (= 378 little cubes of 1cm side length).