Yes because 5 times 5 = 25 cm which is the perimeter of both regular 5 sided pentagons
Yes because 5*5 = 25 cm
Yes, it definately can and always will be. Since you wrote that both pentagons are regular, all sides (and angles) are equivalent to each other. On the first pentagon, one side measured 5cm, so therefore the rest of the sides total up to 25cm. Since the second pentagon has perimeter 25cm, the pentagons must be congruent.
25
A regular pentagon has 5 equal sides so 5 x 5.5 = 27.5 cm.
If it is a regular pentagon then it will have 5 congruent sides.
A regular pentagon has 5 congruent sides
No, a regular pentagon cannot have congruent sides but non-congruent angles. By definition, a regular pentagon has all sides of equal length and all interior angles equal. In a regular pentagon, the angles are each 108 degrees, ensuring that both the sides and angles are congruent. If the sides are congruent but the angles are not, it would be classified as an irregular pentagon instead.
0.8 meters X 5 = 4 meters
If a pentagon, which is a 5-sided figure, has 26.8 for a perimeter, then each side of that regular pentagon is 26.8 divided by 5 = 5.36 long. How do you get 26.8 for the perimeter of a regular pentagon? Use a regular pentagon with 5.36 for a side length.
No. A small pentagon will have smaller diagonals than a large pentagon! However, all the diagonals of a regular pentagon will be congruent.
Not necessarily; if it is a regular pentagon, then yes.
The perimeter of a regular pentagon is five times the side length.