The result is a cylinder
the total distance around the rectangle called is perimeter
Period of rotation is the time taken for an object to complete exactly one revolution around another object, like the earth rotating around the sun or the moon rotating around the earth.
A rotation of 270 degrees counterclockwise is a transformation that turns a figure around a fixed point by 270 degrees in the counterclockwise direction. This rotation can be visualized as a quarter turn in the counterclockwise direction. It is equivalent to rotating the figure three-fourths of a full revolution counterclockwise.
perimeter
A circle has 360 degrees around it.
no, it's the Earth that is constantly rotating around the Sun
by the earth rotating around the sun while the moon is rotating around the earth.
The result is a right cone
no. the common parallelogram that looks like a slightly collapsed square/rectangle has angles around 45 degrees.
because earth is rotating around itself while revolving around the sun
Earth revolves around the sun while rotating on its sides
the total distance around the rectangle called is perimeter
No it does not. Since the Earth is constantly spinning, and also rotating around the sun, the earth will point in all 360 degrees.
No. If you have three suns rotating around each other, that would mean that an object would have to be rotating around two other objects that are rotating around the other two objects, which is rotating around the two original objects. It just can't work
270 degrees is 3/4 of the way around the circle. Ir is the same as rotating it 90 degrees (1/4) of the way clockwise. Turn it so anything that was pointing straight up would be pointing to the right.
Given rectangle ABCD with X as the midpoint of AB, we know that angles in a rectangle are right angles. Since CXD is given as 118 degrees, we can find angle ADX. Since angles around point X must sum to 360 degrees, we have ( \angle ADX = 180 - \angle CXD = 180 - 118 = 62 ) degrees. Consequently, since ( \angle XCD ) is supplementary to ( \angle ADX ), ( \angle XCD = 180 - 62 = 118 ) degrees.
If you are asking what the distance around a rectangle is called, the answer is "perimeter". that is not the question though is it???