Assuming that the piece of plywood is approximately rectangular, simply cut off any two corners. It will then be a hexagon.
The question cannot be answered without information on the length of the piece of plywood that Josh has.
It depends on the size of plywood so there cant be a exact answer. About 120 piece's.
-- a piece of plywood -- every argument -- no geometric figure
A hexagon is a six-sided figure. Cut an equilateral triangle out of a piece of paper. Chop off little equilateral triangles at each tip of the triangle. What you have is a hexagonal piece of paper. Draw around it.
One 3 quarters, 2 dimes, 1 nickel Two 1 50 cent piece, 5 dimes Three 1 50 cent piece, 1 quarter, 1 dime, 3 nickels
The U.S. did not strike quarters with the 1975 date. Dual-dated quarters bearing the date 1776-1976 were issued during all of 1975 and 1976 to honor the Bicentennial. If you have a quarter with that date it is either a fantasy piece or a counterfeit and has no numismatic value.
If you want to raise a sagging floor, you can put a piece of plywood on the floor. You can then add new flooring over the piece of plywood.
The U.S. didn't strike any quarters dated 1799. Your coin is either a fantasy piece or an outright counterfeit.
You need to cut a 9 foot piece of plywood into 12 inch sections. Every cut also removes 1/8 inch. How many 12 inch sections can you get out of the 9 foot piece of plywood?
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The question cannot be answered without information on the length of the piece of plywood that Josh has.
It depends on the size of plywood so there cant be a exact answer. About 120 piece's.
Three quarters, three nickels, and one dime. You could also do it with a 50 cent piece, a quarter, and 5 nickels, as well as with 5 dimes and 2 quarters. Probably more as well I'd imagine.
-- a piece of plywood -- every argument -- no geometric figure
Plywood is layers of thin sheets of wood that are glued together. Each layer is a "ply", thus "plywood". The direction of the grain is alternated with each layer making the piece very strong.
The last Liberty Standing quarters were minted in 1930. All quarters minted after that have the current image of Washington on the obverse. A 1964 Liberty Standing quarter would be a privately-minted fantasy piece with little collector value.If you have a 1964 Washington quarter it's worth about $3.50 for its silver content. If you have a different coin please post a new question with additional details.
2 fat quarters would be 1/2 yard. A fat quarter is 1/4 yard of fabric, but instead of cutting the quarter yard from selvage to selvage ( 9 inches ) it is cut at 18 inches and then cut in half. This way you have a wider piece of fabric to work with, but still have 1/4 yard.