Inscribed
Circle
A circle!
There is no name given to it. (As the number of sides increases, the upper limit of a regular polygon is a circle.)
tenthousandagon >It's still called a polygon because 'poly' means 'many' so a polygon can be a triangle, square, pentagon, etc.... Basically, any shape but a circle
This is true, by definition. Assume that there is a circle that passes through each vertex of a triangle. Then its centre, which we may call the circumcentre of the triangle, must be at an equal distance from each of the vertices because all of the points of the circle are at the same distance from this point.
A vertex and its plural is vertices
A cyclic polygon.
Circle
A circle!
A circular Polygon Hector Rombus.. If you have any more questions please ask Judith Brock : Email... Maths_Nerd-5352%+21-97@maths_is_fun.com
the Interior
A polygon that has 209 diagonals will have 22 sides and it's perfectly acceptable to call it a 22-agon.
There is no name given to it. (As the number of sides increases, the upper limit of a regular polygon is a circle.)
If it is a polygon then you can call it a 10000000-gon. If it's a regular polygon, then it will look almost like a circle.
tenthousandagon >It's still called a polygon because 'poly' means 'many' so a polygon can be a triangle, square, pentagon, etc.... Basically, any shape but a circle
it is called a trapazoid. I asked my math teacher just for this reason!
There is no such thing. I would say that a polygon, by definition, has a finite number of sides. That being said, as the number of sides in a REGULAR polygon increases, it becomes more and more similar to a circle.