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You neglected to say whether the 4mm is the radius of the circle, or the diameter,or the circumference. Each possibility gives you a different area.
get off of me i'm a circle not a circle with a line through it
Zero in the normal course of events. You could say you can approximate a circle by an infinite-sided polygon, and then you would have infinite sides and corners. Or you could say a circle has an inside and an outside.
un cercle (masc.)
The is not stated that the circle inside the square was the greatest possible circle, so all one can say is 8pi at most.
You neglected to say whether the 4mm is the radius of the circle, or the diameter,or the circumference. Each possibility gives you a different area.
You neglected to say whether the 4mm is the radius of the circle, or the diameter,or the circumference. Each possibility leads to a different area.
Circle - Cirkel
contrast = say how items are different compare = say how items are the same
Both "spoke about" and "spoke of" are grammatically correct. However, "spoke about" is more commonly used in contemporary English.
That people have different ideas about it
full circle
get off of me i'm a circle not a circle with a line through it
have different interpretations of the work.
Yes, the base word is the main part of a word to which affixes can be added, while the root word is the simplest form of a word from which other words are derived. They may or may not have the same meaning, as the root word forms the core meaning of the word, while the base word serves as the foundation for adding prefixes or suffixes.
An idiom is an expression that has a meaning different from what it literally says. For example, one can say that something expensive costs an arm and a leg, although clearly the point made is different from what the individual words mean.
'circle' is 'circulo' What's a bule?