A triangle is the simplest polygon with three vertices and 3 sides. A dodecahedron has 12 vertices and 12 sides. There is no limit to the number of vertices and sides that a polygon can have - except that the two numbers must be the same.
The number of sides and vertices are the same
an irregular triangle, quadrilateral, pentagon, hexagon, etc.
Vertices and angles are the same thing. Any polygon has an equal number of sides and vertices (and, therefore, angles).Vertices and angles are the same thing. Any polygon has an equal number of sides and vertices (and, therefore, angles).Vertices and angles are the same thing. Any polygon has an equal number of sides and vertices (and, therefore, angles).Vertices and angles are the same thing. Any polygon has an equal number of sides and vertices (and, therefore, angles).
Opposite vertices are two vertices of any polygon with an even number of sides that have the same number of sides between them.
Suppose a quadrilateral is given using its vertex coordinates. It will be a triangle if three vertices are collinear, that is are on the same line.
An isosceles triangle and an equilateral triangle both have three vertices.
false
"Vertices" means "vertexes". "Vertex" means one of the triangle's points. The triangle has three points. When you talk about two or three of them, you're talking about 2 or 3 'vertices'.
A triangle is the simplest polygon with three vertices and 3 sides. A dodecahedron has 12 vertices and 12 sides. There is no limit to the number of vertices and sides that a polygon can have - except that the two numbers must be the same.
A triangle is the simplest polygon with three vertices and 3 sides. A dodecahedron has 12 vertices and 12 sides. There is no limit to the number of vertices and sides that a polygon can have - except that the two numbers must be the same.
A quadrilateral
A cyclic quadrilateral is one that has concyclic vertices (its corners all fit on the same circle) and, for a simple cyclic quadrilateral, opposite angles are supplementary.
equidistant from the vertices
The vertices refer to the points where to sides of a shape come into contact. So for example, a triangle has three vertices because its sides meet at three points. Each polygon also has the same number of vertices as sides (pentagon = 5 vertices, etc.)
Yes, polygons have the same number of sides and vertices.
no numbers have the same number of edges and vertices