they are used by bees, its the only structure they use
because that is their known shape and the queen bee likes that shape ,sincerly bee expert
the angle that players kick in soccer the angle they swing the bat in baseball the angle they shoot in basketball soccer balls have pentagons and hexagons on them
The answer depends on what information you have. You would need to use the formulae for the distance between two points to check that all 4 sides were the same length. If so, the polygon is a rhombus. If you wish to exclude squares (which are technically rhombi), you would need to check that the gradients of any two adjacent sides did not multiply to -1, since if it did the sides are perpendicular and the rhombus is a square..
It is required to use only the special drinking fountains, lunch counters, schools, and swimming pools that have been provided and are clearly marked for its use.
The cells made by bees in a hive are all hexagons.
They do not use pentagons but hexagons. Hexagons are the most efficient division of a surface.
They aren't - only. If you only used hexagons, you wouldn't be able to make them into a ball. Sticking only hexagons together would give you a flat piece of fabric. To get a ball shape, you use 12 pentagons, and 20 hexagons, with the same length sides. That combination is what allows you to make something nearly perfectly round out of bits that are actually flat.
Three hexagons comprise more than 7 lines so you cannot use only seven numbers, once each, to make all the lines add up to the same number!
A rhombus is a square tilted on it's side. Or a rhombus is a diamond, or the sandbox looked like a rhombus.
they are used by bees, its the only structure they use
To draw a honeycomb, start by creating a series of connected hexagons. Make sure the hexagons are all the same size and evenly spaced. Use lines to connect the corners of the hexagons to form the honeycomb pattern. Add shading or color to give the honeycomb dimension and depth.
I don't use the name "rhombus-quadrilateral", but perhaps the answer to your question is that a rhombus is a special kind of parallelogram
Triangles are rigid, quadrilaterals are not - a square can be "squashed" into rhombus.
To find the value of x in a rhombus, use these properties. All sides of a rhombus are the same length. Opposite angles of a rhombus are the same size and measure. Intersection of the diagonals of a rhombus form right angles. Sides are perpendicular. The diagonals of rhombus bisect each other. Adjacent angles add up to 180 degrees.
in math class we learn about rhombuses
Yes, a square is a rhombus. It's just a specialized form or rhombus. Use the link to the Math Forum web site where this question is explained.No never. A square has four equal length sides and 90 degree angles in every corner. A rhombus has equal length sides, but they are not 90 degree angles