Yes.. depending on the size of the hexagon's sides
Not if the hexagon is a regular hexagon with sides of the same length as the sides of the square.
Yes. A regular tessellation can be created from either an equilateral triangle, a square, or a hexagon.
Yes
The area of a regular hexagon with a 24-inch perimeter is about 41.57 square inches.
* square * equilateral triangle * or any of the other regular polygons having sides of identical length, e.g. regular pentagon, regular hexagon, regular octagon, etc
A square centimeter measures area, and a centimeter measures length, so they are not exactly comparable in size.
Not if the hexagon is a regular hexagon with sides of the same length as the sides of the square.
Yes. A regular tessellation can be created from either an equilateral triangle, a square, or a hexagon.
Yes
Triangle, square, hexagon.
It's a unit of area equal to the area of a square that measures one centimeter on each side.
A square has 4 equal sides whereas a regular hexagon has 6 equal sides
square, equillateral triangle, & regular hexagon
The area of a regular hexagon with a 24-inch perimeter is about 41.57 square inches.
* square * equilateral triangle * or any of the other regular polygons having sides of identical length, e.g. regular pentagon, regular hexagon, regular octagon, etc
Such a hexagon is impossible. A regular hexagon with sides of 2 cm can have an apothem of sqrt(3) cm = approx 1.73.It seems you got your question garbled. A regular hexagon, with sides of 2 cm, has an area of 10.4 sq cm. If you used your measurement units properly, you would have noticed that the 10.4 was associated with square units and it had to refer to an area, not a length.
You don't. One measures length, the other measures area.