300
because the outline of France is like the shape of a hexagon
the general shape of France is roughly that of an hexagon.
the word hexagon is used as an alternative name for France itself because of the general shape of the country, which fits (very roughly) in an hexagon.
Yes; it will form a honey-comb shape. <http://gwydir.demon.co.uk/jo/tess/bighex.gif> for image.
Metropolitan France is often referred to a 'l'Hexagone, and is indeed roughly hexagonal in shape.
300 thak you:)
first divide the hexagon into three parts a rectangle and two triangles then try to findthe areas of all and then take individual heights and add them to get the height of the hexagon
Hexagon, hypotenuse, and height.
51.96
im not sure but i think its six.. since the two dimension are length and width and does not have height... so if u count hexagon's sides without height is... six
It depends on the length of each side and the height of the tank.
hypotenuse, height, hexagon,
Hypotenuse, Heptagon(al), Hexagon(al), Hectogram, Height.
the formula to find the area of any prism is to find the area of the base (a regular hexagon, meaning that all sides and angles are the same) and multiply by the height of the prism. To find the area of a hexagon you multiply the apothem by the perimeter of the hexagon, and then divide that by 2. the apothem is a line from the center point to the center of any side, forming a right angle with a side, it doesn't matter which one. Once you find the area of the hexagon, multiply it with the height.
The volume of a standard hexagon can be given by the product of 6 times the length of one side of the hexagon and the height. Note that for a hexagon to have volume, it must have another dimension that is height.
The answer depends on whether or not the hexagon is regular, partly regular or totally irregular. In the last case it will not help. It also depends on whether you start off with a regular hexagon standing with one vertex above another or standing on one of its sides!
The question does not state that it is a regular hexagon and so you may not assume that it is. Therefore, there is no simple formula because a hexagon can have very many shapes. One method would be to pick a point in the plane of the hexagon and join it to all the vertices. This divides up the hexagon into triangles. Their areas can be calculated using base and height, or three sides, or two sides and included angle - whichever you like. Finally the areas of the triangles must be combined to get the area of the hexagon.