The answer depends on what a polagram is meant to be!
A side with two sides open pours more easily.
No. For example, the two perpendicular sides can be adjacent; in this case, the two sides can be of different length; the lengths of the other two sides aren't unique either.The two perpendicular sides can also be the two opposite sides (i.e., side #1 and side #3, if you count consecutive sides); here, too, there are multiple possible solutions. Just try it out!
Yes check: the sum of the two length sides > the 3rd length side the difference of the two length sides < the 3rd length side
Two sides of a triangle do not, automatically, give you the measure of the third side. Further information about the triangle is required.
For each side of a rectangular prism there is an opposite side that is identical in measurement. So there are two width sides, two length sides, and two height sides.
The two sides of the market are the buy side and the sell side.
To create a triangle, the sum of the two shorter sides must be greater than the third side. If the longest side is one of the two given sides, then the missing side must be greater than the difference between the two shorter sides. If the missing side is the longest side then the missing side must be less than the sum of the two shorter sides.
It has 2 sides - one straight and one curved.
The left side and the right side.
A side with two sides open pours more easily.
It is a congruence theorem for triangles. It states that if you have two triangles in which two sides of one are congruent to two sides of the other, and the angles included by the sides are equal, then the triangles are congruent.
No. For example, the two perpendicular sides can be adjacent; in this case, the two sides can be of different length; the lengths of the other two sides aren't unique either.The two perpendicular sides can also be the two opposite sides (i.e., side #1 and side #3, if you count consecutive sides); here, too, there are multiple possible solutions. Just try it out!
Yes check: the sum of the two length sides > the 3rd length side the difference of the two length sides < the 3rd length side
Two sides of a triangle do not, automatically, give you the measure of the third side. Further information about the triangle is required.
For each side of a rectangular prism there is an opposite side that is identical in measurement. So there are two width sides, two length sides, and two height sides.
Off side and leg side.
the left side and the right side