The scale or scaling factor.
A square is a polygon with equal sides and angles. Polygons with all sides the same lengths and all angles the same are Regular Polygons. Squares are one example of many, picture a stop sign. Such a figure is called a regular polygon
This is true.
They are called regular polygons
Prism
They are faces the polyhedron.
Three sided polygons would be triangles. Triangles that have the same shape (same angle measures) but are different sizes (different side lengths) would be called similar triangles. In similar triangles, corresponding sides have lengths in the same ratio. If triangle ABC is similar to triangle DEF, then: AB/DE = BC/EF = AC/DF.
ratio
ratio
If two objects have the same shape, they are called "similar." When two figures are similar, the ratios of the lengths of their corresponding sides are equal. To determine if the triangles shown are similar, compare their corresponding sides.
if two polygons are similar, then the ratio of the length of 2 corresponding sides is called a scale factor
They are called regular polygons
Yes, those polygons which have angles of 90 degrees and equal side lengths are called squares; those with uneven side lengths are called rectangles.
The number used to multiply the lengths of a figure to create a larger or smaller similar image is called the scale factor. It is a ratio that represents the proportional relationship between the corresponding sides of two similar figures.
Proportional.
Similar.
A square is a polygon with equal sides and angles. Polygons with all sides the same lengths and all angles the same are Regular Polygons. Squares are one example of many, picture a stop sign. Such a figure is called a regular polygon
Homologous