No, it cannot.
No, a regular pentagon and a square cannot tessellate together. While squares can tessellate on their own, pentagons have angles that do not allow them to fit together with squares without leaving gaps. The internal angles of a regular pentagon are 108 degrees, while those of a square are 90 degrees, making it impossible to create a continuous tiling without overlaps or spaces.
No but a square will tessellate on its own.
An octagon can be used to create a tessellation, but an octagon cannot tessellate on its own.
Yes you can if under the right circumstances.
Shapes such as circles, regular pentagons, and heptagons.Most regular polygons will not tessellate on their own. Only triangles, squares and hexagons will.With irregular polygons there is more of a choice. All isosceles or scalene triangles, parallelograms, trapeziums and kites will tessellate as will some higher order polygons.
Under the right circumstances and conditions, YES.
Yes a square will tessellate on its own
Generally speaking, no. You can't own a handgun if you have any felony. It is possible, under some circumstances, to have your gun rights restored.
Equilateral triangle, square and regular hexagon.
Definitely not. It is never good under any circumstances to take a life or even ones own life.
No, a semicircle cannot tessellate on its own because it does not fill space without leaving gaps. When arranged, semicircles can create patterns, but they will always result in empty spaces where the curves do not meet. For a shape to tessellate, it must be able to completely cover a plane without overlaps or gaps, which semicircles cannot achieve alone.
Karl Marx has quite a lot of quoteshere is one"Men make their own history, but they do not make it as they please; they do not make it under self-selected circumstances, but under circumstances existing already given and transmitted from the past." - Karl Marx