How do I find the perimeter of a square with one side listed as 4x + 3 and one more side listed as 3(2x - 5)?

Thank you

If it's a square, the sides are all equal, so

4x+3 = 3(2x-5)
4x+3 = 6x-15
2x = 18
x = 9

so, the preimeter is 36

perimeter 36

To find the perimeter of a square, we need to add up all the sides of the square.

In this case, we have two sides listed: one side is given as 4x + 3, and the other side is given as 3(2x - 5).

To find the perimeter, we need to add these two sides together and then multiply the sum by 4, since a square has four equal sides.

So, let's start by adding the two sides together:

4x + 3 + 3(2x - 5)

First, distribute the 3 to both terms inside the parentheses:

4x + 3 + 6x - 15

Next, combine like terms:

(4x + 6x) + (3 - 15)

10x - 12

Now, multiply the sum by 4 to get the perimeter:

4(10x - 12)

To simplify, distribute the 4 to both terms inside the parentheses:

4 * 10x - 4 * 12

40x - 48

Therefore, the perimeter of the square is 40x - 48.

A square has all sides of equal length. You do not have a square.

For a rectangle, 2[(4x+3)+3(2x - 5)] = ?