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Yes (if you ignore the colours of the rings).
Yes
The Olympic flag has a white background, with five interlaced rings in the center: blue, yellow, black, green and red. This design is symbolic and represents the five inhabited continents of the world, united by Olympic competition, while the six colors are those that appear on all the national flags of the world at the present time.
They don't have a line of symmetry at all because there is no line, folded along which can both sides exactly match
You interlock the 3 large circles as in how part of the Olympic rings look, or as in a Venn diagram. So, each large circle shares are a section with each of the other two, and there is a central section that is within all 3 circles. Now, simply place a small circle in each of the 7 sections of the diagram: - the 3 sections that are only in 1 large circle - the 3 sections that are within 2 large circles - the 1 central section that is within all 3 large circles Voila! You have 4 small circles within each large circle.
because the world is a circle
The Tokyo 1964 Olympic emblem consists of the Olympic rings below the red circle (seen on the Japanese national flag). The red circle represents the rising sun. The design was submitted by Yusaku Kamekura.
no archeoligist found a monument with the five olympic rings on. Hence the five olympic rings.
the olympic rings
5 rings
ghjkfyuifyujgyuyui78kiyui78iiuiyuiyuiyuuyuiyu why do the olympic rings never changes colour
The Olympic rings are on Tower Bridge - not London Bridge.
the 5 olympic rings stand for the 5 contenents of the world
The olympic rings came out in 1913 by Baron Pierre de Coubertin who is also the founder of the modern Olympic Games. These rings represent the five continents.
The five Olympic rings were not designed until 1913. There were no Olympic rings associated with the ancient Olympic Games.
rings
The olympic rings? The rings represent the original 5 continents, every flag in the world has at least one colour of the Olympic rings in their national flag.