Congruant
No. The word congruent is not applied to sides or angles.
The word regular, for polygons, refers to all sides equal length, and all angles equal measure. A scalene triangle by definition, has not two sides equal, and all of the angles are different measure.
This is not a correct Latin word. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found.
I have no idea, but papilio means butterfly. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found.
polygons are polygons u willl find the answer here trust me each letter in polygons name used only once because it is a word
All you can say about it is that it's "equiangular" ... a big word that means all of its angles measure the same size. At first, one might think that a polygon with all angles equal is "regular" ... that if all of its angles are equal, then its sides must also be all of the same length. But that's only true of a triangle, and doesn't hold for polygons with more than three sides. Example: A rectangle has all angles equal, but not its sides.
Possibly "to beat", but most probably "to mourn": this word was not used in (classical) Latin, though plangere was.. The secondary (and more prominent) sense evolved from beating oneself in traditional mourning rituals among the Romans.No matching link found.No matching link found.No matching link found.No matching link found.No matching link found.No matching link found.No matching link found.No matching link found.No matching link found.No matching link found.No matching link found.No matching link found.No matching link found.No matching link found.No matching link found.No matching link found.No matching link found.No matching link found.No matching link found.No matching link found.No matching link found.No matching link found.No matching link found.No matching link found.No matching link found.No matching link found.No matching link found.No matching link found.No matching link found.No matching link found.No matching link found.No matching link found.No matching link found.No matching link found.No matching link found.No matching link found.No matching link found.
According to Lewis & Short and Liddel, Scott, Jones, this word did not exist in Greek or Latin. Anything with -ph- would have to be originally Greek. If you gave us more context, it might be clear what the author meant to express by this word. The Greek verbal stem treph- usually means "to feed, raise, educate", but no word trephasma would regularly be formed from that.No matching link found.No matching link found.No matching link found.No matching link found.No matching link found.No matching link found.No matching link found.No matching link found.No matching link found.No matching link found.No matching link found.No matching link found.No matching link found.No matching link found.No matching link found.No matching link found.No matching link found.No matching link found.No matching link found.No matching link found.No matching link found.No matching link found.No matching link found.No matching link found.No matching link found.No matching link found.No matching link found.No matching link found.No matching link found.No matching link found.No matching link found.No matching link found.No matching link found.No matching link found.No matching link found.No matching link found.No matching link found.No matching link found.No matching link found.No matching link found.No matching link found.No matching link found.No matching link found.No matching link found.No matching link found.No matching link found.No matching link found.No matching link found.No matching link found.No matching link found.No matching link found.No matching link found.No matching link found.No matching link found.No matching link found.No matching link found.No matching link found.No matching link found.No matching link found.No matching link found.No matching link found.No matching link found.No matching link found.No matching link found.No matching link found.No matching link found.No matching link found.No matching link found.
Survivor
The adjective aequus/aequa/aequum means "equal", stem aequ-.No matching link found.No matching link found.No matching link found.No matching link found.No matching link found.No matching link found.No matching link found.
Homologous is the word used to describe matching chromosomes, with a homolog being a pair of homologous chromosomes.
It's the verb for "to run."This is not a (correctly spelled) Latin word, and I have no idea what word you could mean.No matching link found.No matching link found.No matching link found.No matching link found.No matching link found.No matching link found.No matching link found.No matching link found.No matching link found.No matching link found.No matching link found.No matching link found.No matching link found.No matching link found.No matching link found.No matching link found.No matching link found.