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∙ 14y agocut into 4 pieces
Wiki User
∙ 14y agoPieces of timber ("4 by 4" or "2 by 2") with a square cross section but a long length. A square place mat or beer mat , with a square (obviously) cross section and a very small height.
A square.
Depending on the inclination of the plane used for the cross-section, it could be a square, rectangle, trapezium, triangle.
A square.
I know that the holy cross is divided on four pieces. One of the pieces if buried in Bulgaria. I am from Bulgaria and the land where is buried one of the pieces of Holy Cross is named "CROSS WOOD" http://www.krastova-gora.hit.bg/
It could be a wall that is 1 square foot in cross section and 47 feet long.
Yes a prism can have a square cross-section
for three by three, first, solve a blue cross with the edge pieces solved, then, you solve the corner pieces. Then, you should have t's in the other places then you solve the edge pieces in the t's . Then, solve the green cross. Make all of the pieces in the correct spot and solve it , There you go! i HOPE you could sove the rubik's cube with these directions. Give an answer go to the search box in wikianswers and type answers to how to solve the rubik's cube and answer with what you think thanks!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
A cylinder has a circular cross section, a square prism has a square cross section.
The white cross on a red square is the swatch logo
Imagine that you wanted to cut a globe or a sphere exactly in half. When you looked at the cut you would see an exact circle on both pieces. This area would be the cross-section. You could work out the area of this cross-section by using A = Pi X r squared. But be careful. Don't assume that the cross sectional area is the same no matter where you cut. If you cut the globe at some other point, say near to the edge, the cross-section (the circular area that you would see) would be a lot smaller. You would come across a uniform cross-section if you cut a cable. No matter where you cut the cable the cross-section should be roughly the same. Also cross section doesn't have to be circular. The cross-section you get really depends on the original shape you are dealing with. If you cut a cube in half, you would get a square cross-section. So I guess you could imagine the term as applying to cutting across (hence cross) something to reveal 2 sections (hence section).
Square, cross, square, square