If the sum of the interior angles add up to 9540 degrees then it will have 55 sides.
if the measure of each interior angle of a polygon is 150 degrees how amny sides does it have?
It will have 15 sides
15 sides
An equiangular polygon is one in which all the angles are of the same measure. But the sides are not the same length. A simple example is a rectangle.An equilateral polygon is one in which all the sides are of the same length. But the angles are not of the same measure. A simple example is a rhombus (diamond).A regular polygon is one in which all the angles are of the same measure and the sides are of the same length. A simple example is a square.An equiangular triangle must be equilateral and conversely. So they must be regular. But, as illustrated by the examples above, polygons of 4 or more sides can be equiangular, equilateral or regular - or, of course, none of these.
If the measure of an interior angle of a regular polygon is 140o, the polygon is a nonagon (sometimes called an ennagon) having 9 sides.
if the measure of each interior angle of a polygon is 150 degrees how amny sides does it have?
It will have 15 sides
15 sides
The terms equiangular means a polygon having the same angle between any two adjacent sides. Equilateral means all sides of equal length. A polygon can be equilateral without being equiangular (the rhombus) and equiangular without being equilateral (the rectangle). If a polygon is both equilateral and equiangular, it is a "regular polygon" such as the pentagon, square, and equilateral triangle.
An equilateral polygon is a polygon whose sides are all of the same measure. An equiangular polygon is a polygon whose angles are all of the same measure. A triangle is the only polygon where these two are effectively one and the same.. But it does not apply to polygons of 4 or more sides. A square and rhombus are equilateral but a rhombus is not equiangular. A square and rectangle are equiangular but a rectangle is not equilateral. This can be extended to all polygons with more than 4 sides but it is more difficult because they do not have distinctive names.
An equiangular polygon. NOT a regular polygon which requires that all the sides are also of the same length.
An equiangular polygon is one in which all the angles are of the same measure. But the sides are not the same length. A simple example is a rectangle.An equilateral polygon is one in which all the sides are of the same length. But the angles are not of the same measure. A simple example is a rhombus (diamond).A regular polygon is one in which all the angles are of the same measure and the sides are of the same length. A simple example is a square.An equiangular triangle must be equilateral and conversely. So they must be regular. But, as illustrated by the examples above, polygons of 4 or more sides can be equiangular, equilateral or regular - or, of course, none of these.
Since the amount of sides of a polygon is equal to the amount of angles, we have:144x = total anglesThe total measure of each angle is determined by 180(x - 2), by splitting it into several triangles. Thus:144x = 180(x - 2)144x = 180x - 360360 = 36xx = 10This polygon has 10 sides (a decagon).
A rhombus has four sides of equal lengths. So it is an equilateral polygon. But it is not an equiangular. It's angles are not equal in measure.
If the measure of an interior angle of a regular polygon is 140o, the polygon is a nonagon (sometimes called an ennagon) having 9 sides.
If each interior angle is 175 degrees then the polygon will have 72 sides
If its a regular polygon then 180-interior angle and divide the answer into 360 which will give the number of sides of the polygon.