Sort of depends on how the two triangles are beforehand.
One nice way to make four equilateral triangles from six matchsticks is to make a tetrahedron (a triangular pyramid).
No.
Octahedron. It is two square pyramids that share a base (Imagine a pyramid from Egypt, flip it upside down, and stick that to the bottom of the original pyramid).
A whole stick is worth 1 whole, use fraction sticks to find equivalent fractions, use the fraction sticks to add fractions with the same denominator
Let the length of the short stick be s cm; then: The longer stick is s + 22 cm. And the two sticks together is: s cm + (s + 22) cm = 142 cm → 2s + 22 cm = 142 cm This can then be solved for s, the length of the shorter stick; from which the longer stick length can be found.
A metre stick is the length of one metre. Therefore, two metre sticks is equal to 2 metres.
Make a Triangular Pyramid. Place three flat to form the first triangle, then make it into a pyramid with the remaining three. (It's a tetrahedron - a four-sided figure, and all sides are equilateral triangles.)
haha you pee on sticks
No.
Octahedron. It is two square pyramids that share a base (Imagine a pyramid from Egypt, flip it upside down, and stick that to the bottom of the original pyramid).
The stick is a bond.
The plural form for the noun stick is sticks.
The material is tacky and sticks to the surfaces it contacts.
Stick McGhee went by Sticks.
Use a truss design. Remember to use lots of triangles as they are the strongest geometrical shape, and also, if you are just testing only the strongest Popsicle stick bridge, use many reinforced Popsicle sticks (two or more popsicle sticks laid on-top of each other). Make your bridge as symmetrical as possible, as this well help your bridge endure more surface and joint tension.If you are using popsicle sticks for your deck as well, you should probably double layer it, then add a zigzag or triangles pattern of sticks on the bottom the deck, to further reinforce it. When you make joints with your popsicle sticks, make it look something like this: --------_______-------- <stick layout keep that pattern consistent, with out laying them in a stair type pattern. Think of those small sturdy bridges with wide, geometrical beams.
aboriginal digging sticks a made by of bush sticks
glue
I/you/we/they stick. He/she/it sticks. The present participle is sticking.