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Using systematic polygon naming, a twenty-two sided polygon would be called an icosakaidigon.
A 57-sided polygon would be called a pentacontaheptagon.(see related link for naming)
A 38-sided polygon is called a triacontakaioctagon. The naming convention for polygons follows the Greek numerical prefixes for the number of sides, in this case "tri" for 3 and "contakai" for 10, along with the suffix "-gon" for polygon. Therefore, a 38-sided polygon is a triacontakaioctagon.
A 111-sided polygon is called a "hectadecagon." The naming convention for polygons follows the Greek numerical prefixes, with "hecta-" representing 100 and "deca-" representing 10. Therefore, combining these prefixes gives us "hectadecagon" for a 111-sided polygon.
A 33-sided polygon is called a "tritriacontagon." The naming convention for polygons uses a combination of Greek prefixes and the suffix "-gon" based on the number of sides. In this case, "tri-" represents the number 3 and "triaconta-" represents the number 30, resulting in "tritriacontagon" for a 33-sided polygon.
Using systematic polygon naming, a twenty-two sided polygon would be called an icosakaidigon.
A 57-sided polygon would be called a pentacontaheptagon.(see related link for naming)
A 38-sided polygon is called a triacontakaioctagon. The naming convention for polygons follows the Greek numerical prefixes for the number of sides, in this case "tri" for 3 and "contakai" for 10, along with the suffix "-gon" for polygon. Therefore, a 38-sided polygon is a triacontakaioctagon.
A 78-sided polygon is called a "hept78gon." In general, polygons are named based on the number of their sides, using a prefix that indicates the quantity followed by the suffix "-gon." For example, a polygon with 7 sides is a heptagon, so a 78-sided polygon follows the same naming convention.
A 111-sided polygon is called a "hectadecagon." The naming convention for polygons follows the Greek numerical prefixes, with "hecta-" representing 100 and "deca-" representing 10. Therefore, combining these prefixes gives us "hectadecagon" for a 111-sided polygon.
I suggest you just call it a "373839-sided polygon". Inventing, memorizing, or deriving fancy names is too much trouble for such large numbers.
11
A 103-sided polygon is called a "hectacontatrigon." The naming convention for polygons is based on Greek numerical prefixes, with "hecta" meaning 100 and "conta" meaning 10. The suffix "trigon" denotes a polygon with three sides.
The names of polygons with sides ranging from 21 to 30 are as follows: a 21-sided polygon is called a icosagon, a 22-sided polygon is a dicosagon, a 23-sided polygon is a tricosagon, a 24-sided polygon is a tetracosagon, a 25-sided polygon is a pentacosagon, a 26-sided polygon is a hexacosagon, a 27-sided polygon is a heptacosagon, a 28-sided polygon is an octacosagon, a 29-sided polygon is a nonacosagon, and a 30-sided polygon is a triacontagon.
A 33-sided polygon is called a "tritriacontagon." The naming convention for polygons uses a combination of Greek prefixes and the suffix "-gon" based on the number of sides. In this case, "tri-" represents the number 3 and "triaconta-" represents the number 30, resulting in "tritriacontagon" for a 33-sided polygon.
A five sided polygon is called a pentagon because pentagon means five sided polygon I think.
An 11 sided polygon is a hendecagon and a 12 sided polygon is a dodecagon