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28 September, 04:48

A square has side lengths of 4 feet. If the dimensions are tripled, how much larger will the area of the new square be than the area of the original square?

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  1. 28 September, 05:17
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    You can do this just by tripling the side of the square after finding its area.

    Given

    1 side of the small square = s = 4 feet.

    1 side of the larger square = 3 * 4 = 12 feet

    Solution

    Area_small = s*s = 4 * 4 = 16 feet

    Area_large = s*s = 12 * 12 = 144

    Area_Large / Area_Small = 144 / 16 = 9

    The large square is 9 times large square is 9 times larger than the smaller square.

    Note

    You enlarged the small square's edge by 3 and the area difference is 3^2 = 9
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