You could start by spelling out the words properly so that we can read your question rather than having to decipher it.
No. A circle has no corners and a square has four corners. There is no object that has no corners and four corners.
A square and rectangle can fit in a circle with all corners touching the circle.
It depends on the diameter of the circle and the width of the square, if they are the same then the answer is no. If you draw yourself a square then inscribe a circle with a radius of half the length of a side of the square, the circle will fit inside the square but the corners of the square will be outside the circle. Thus by inspection the area of the square is larger than the area of the circle.
A square has four corners whereas a circle doesn't.
circle: no corner triangle: 3 corners rectangle and square:4 corners pentagon:5 corners
No. A circle has no corners and a square has four corners. There is no object that has no corners and four corners.
A square and rectangle can fit in a circle with all corners touching the circle.
The number of square corners in a circle is infinite because it has no definite angle.
It is not. If you draw yourself a square then inscribe a circle with a radius of half the length of a side of the square, the circle will fit inside the square but the corners of the square will be outside the circle. Thus by inspection the area of the square is larger than the area of the circle.
All of them apart from a circle
It depends on the diameter of the circle and the width of the square, if they are the same then the answer is no. If you draw yourself a square then inscribe a circle with a radius of half the length of a side of the square, the circle will fit inside the square but the corners of the square will be outside the circle. Thus by inspection the area of the square is larger than the area of the circle.
A circle.
A square has four corners whereas a circle doesn't.
Of course, it is not possible !
circle
Zero.
yes, a circle has the smallest surface area of anything. just imagine a circle inside a square so that there is 1 point on each side of the square touching a point on the circle. The corners of the square are the only thing the circle does not have, while the circle does not have anything the square does not have. Square is bigger