None, because there is no such shape. The word could be a hexagon or a heptagon, or maybe you meant something else entirely. Please check and correct your spelling and resubmit.
None since a hextagon - a possible conflation of a hexagon and a heptagon - does not exist.
There is no such word as a hextagon. Similar words are hexagon or heptagon and it is not possible to say which one you mean.
It is not possible to answer the question since there is no such word as a "hextagon" and it could be a typo for hexagon or heptagon and there is no way of telling which one you meant. I suggest you check your spelling and then resubmit the question.
shapee with 6 sides:)
a realy big beast from Brutal Legend
cghujh
Both words, as well as "similarity" are incorrectly spelled: there is no such thing as a hextagon nor a petagon.
None, because there is no such thing as a conis and no shape which is called a hextagon. The word could be a hexagon or a heptagon, or maybe you meant something else entirely. Please check and correct your spelling and resubmit.
The hexagon is the base.
None, because there is no such shape. The word could be a hexagon or a heptagon, or maybe you meant something else entirely. Please check and correct your spelling and resubmit.
None, because there is no such shape. The word could be a hexagon or a heptagon, or maybe you meant something else entirely. Please check and correct your spelling and resubmit.
A single shape cannot be congruent. Congruence is a relationship between two shapes: one can be congruent to the other - or not.In any case, the question makes no sense because there is no such shape as a hextagon. The word could be a hexagon or a heptagon, or maybe you meant something else entirely. Please check and correct your spelling and resubmit.
None, because there is no such shape. The word could be a hexagon or a heptagon, or maybe you meant something else entirely. Please check and correct your spelling and resubmit.
If you Google "area of a hexagon," you'll find quite a few websites with illustrations that will explain this better than I can without them. If you draw three diagonals from opposite corners of the hexagon, you will notice that the hexagon has been divided into six equilateral triangles. If you then draw six lines from the center to the midpoint of each side, you will have created twelve equal right triangles and can find the area of each by taking half of the base (which is half of a side) times the height. Multiply that by 12 and you have the area of the hexagon. The height of each triangle is the line you drew from the center to the middle of the side. This is known as an "apothem."
The Mirror Crack'd from Side to Side has 256 pages.
There were too many to be counted!
6 sides, left side, right side, top side, bottom side, inside and outside.