Any pair of a base and a corresponding height can help us find the area of a parallelogram, but some base-height pairs are more easily found than others.
When a parallelogram is drawn on a grid and has horizontal sides, we can use a horizontal side as the base. When it has vertical sides, we can use a vertical side as the base. The grid can help us find (or estimate) the lengths of the base and of the corresponding height.
When a parallelogram is not drawn on a grid, we can still find its area if we know a base and a corresponding height.
In this parallelogram, the corresponding height for the side that is 10 units long is not given, but the height for the side that is 8 units long is given. This base-height pair can help us find the area.
Parallelograms that have the same base and the same height will have the same area; the product of the base and height will be equal. Here are 4 different parallelograms with the same pair of base-height measurements.