Adjacent sides intersect at vertices. Non-adjacent sides may be parallel and so may not intersect.
Every polygon has two of its sides intersect.
Each point of a polygon at which two sides intersect is called VERTEX
Adjacent sides intersect at vertices. Non-adjacent sides may be parallel and so may not intersect.
No, A polygon is a closed geometric figure whose sides are nothing more than line segments. Each corner of a polygon where two sides intersect is called a vertex of the polygon.
An angle. A polygon is a plane figure bounded by straight sides (triangle, quadrilateral, pentagon, etc).
When two sides of a polygon meet they meet at a point called a vertex. If it's two lines that intersect each other and keep going it is called a transversal.
Angles that are separated by a distance. For example, any two angles of any polygon do not intersect and they are coplanar.
Any two adjacent sides on a polygon will form an included angle.
No, a crescent is not a polygon. It is the area between two arcs of different radii that intersect each other.Theoretically, the crescent could be considered to be a polygon with an infinite number of infinitesimally small sides, but that is not the standard interpretation.
Any polygon can have, and every regular polygon has.
At most two sides of a polygon go through any point of intersection.
Draw the perpendicular bisectors of any two sides which are not directly opposite one another. These will meet at the centre of the circle.If it has an even number of vertices, simply join two pair of opposite vertices. They will intersect at the centre of the circle.